Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Discover Unusual Museums In Vienna


Vienna is a great city that has many unusual museums that should experience during your next stay in Austrian soil. You will be delighted with your visit to these institutions that reveal unusual collections.

Coffee heating, the choice is wide

Vienna enjoys a worldwide reputation for its museums and its rich collections of art. However, do not forget that it also contains a multitude of institutions that might seem bizarre and unusual museums. You will be pleasantly surprised by your visit to the Museum of coffee where you will discover a wide variety of coffee grinders and espresso machines. The Museum of the circus and clowns, who is dedicated to contraception, those who are devoted to magic boxes or chimney sweeps are also essential.

The Brennpunkt or heating Museum is located in a place far enough away from the historic center of Vienna. You will find a very interesting exhibition of ovens, stoves to heat old, enormous boilers, pipes and old gleaming utensils. These were brought to Borneo and Tanzania where they were used to light the fire or cook. Contrary to what one might think, it is not a technical museum. The institution was established with the aim to maintain a certain part of the story of the Austrian capital.


Cultural heritage largely from private collections

A visit to the Museum of the tooth will allow you to trace the evolution of this sector of medicine over the centuries. You will find among other prostheses ivory, wax molds game's very disconcerting. They were once used to learn to treat the teeth. You will also find a wide range of dental chairs, some of which date from the early 19th century.

These unusual museums of Vienna are from private collections. Their owners are often large companies that have decided to expose the general public. Thousands of visitors come each year to explore. The entrance usually costs only a few dollars and hours are quite limited compared to the prestigious world famous museums, such as the Planetarium, the Albertina and the Museum of Fine Arts.

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