Musée EDF Electropolis-L'aventure de l'électricité |
68200 Mulhouse, France (Grand Est) |
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Address |
EDF Electropolis Museum -The adventure of electricity
55 rue du Pâturage |
Floor area | 20 000 m² / 215 278 ft² Area for radios (if not the same) 250 m² / 2 691 ft² |
Opening times
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February - December: Tuesday - Sunday: 10am - 6pm
Février - Décembre: mardi - dimanche: 10h - 18h
Februar - Dezember: Dienstag bis Sonntag: 10 - 18 Uhr |
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Status from 04/2023
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Adults: € 10; Children (4-17 years): € 5; students, disabled persons: € 8 Family (2 adults and 2 children from 4 to 17 years old): € 25 Adulte: 10 €; Enfant (4 à 17 ans): 5 €; Etudiant jusqu’à 26 ans incluse, Personne handicapée: 8 € Famille (2 adultes et 2 enfants de 4 à 17 ans): 25 € |
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Contact |
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Homepage | www.musee-electropolis.fr |
Location / Directions |
The EDF Electropolis Museum is located in the south of Alsace in Mulhouse. By highway: A36, exit 17: Mulhouse-Dornach, follow the signs indicating the direction of the EDF Electropolis Museum and French Railway Museum/Cité du Train. By train: TGV EST, Mulhouse station. In the front of the station: tram 3 (in the direction of Lutterbach), or tram-train (in the direction of Thann St Jacques), "Musées" stop. Direct from the station. By plane: EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse- Freiburg is 26 km away. |
Some example model pages for sets you can see there:
Some example tube pages for sets you can see there:
Description | The EDF Electropolis Museum is the largest museum in Europe dedicated to electrical energy. With an exhibition area of 4000 m2, a futuristic architectural setting and a dynamic scenography, the EDF Electropolis Museum displays objects and models, holds audio-visual projections and events which retrace the fascinating saga of electricity. The large modelIts 80 metres length depicts the trajectory of electricity : an original approach where the visitor can trace electricity production back to its origins, starting with domestic electricity through to its distribution and also a look at the different types of power plants. See, touch, understandExperiment with your voice, compose a tune, play the electric guitar or the Hammond organ, ah this is possible and accessible to aIl in the music area. Visitors can understand, through music and its production techniques, how electricity is involved, flot only in the technology, but also in the social transformation of tastes and means of making sound. The evolution of guitars, the organ, or the use ofthe voice is ail the more vivid for the visitors if they can themselves try things out, play, listen. Fully refurbished scientific areaDive into an atmosphere of cabinets of curios from the 18th century where the experiments of the first discoverers of electricity will be revealed. Static electricity makes objects move, creates lightning and electrifies bodies. The Great EngineThe BBC-Sulzer Great Engine is the Museum's prized possession. Built in 1901, this steam engine of 170 tons drove a BBC alternator which supplied electricity for the D.M.C. company at Mulhouse until 1947. After many years of inactivity, it was decided that this would be kept as part of the Museum's technical and industrial heritage. The Technological GardenA visit to the EDF ElectropolisMuseum is completed and enhanced by this outdoor visit. In two pavilions and in a pleasant landscaped environment, visitors can discover the production and transport of electricity through the displays of exceptional material, sometimes genuine technological sculptures, such as turbo-alternators, circuit-breakers, disconnecting devices, rectifiers, regulators,.... You can also enjoy a pleasant rest in the 2-hectare garden. There is also a children's playground area. |
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