Germany, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom Pavilion Guide

Updated on tourism 2024-04-05
12 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Switzerland: If you must take the cable car, you can only go before 8pm.

    The best time to go to the United Kingdom and Germany at night is to queue up during the day, unless you can rush to the queue of the German Pavilion before, you will have to queue for at least an hour, so you can also choose to go to the entrance of Changqing Road at 7 o'clock, and rush directly to the German Pavilion as soon as the park opens.

    In fact, there is nothing in the British pavilion, just look at it from the outside Recommended France, Italy, Finland, Sweden, Denmark and Turkey These pavilions are all good

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    From the entrance and exit of No. 8 Houtan or the entrance and exit of No. 7 Changqing North Road, (after entering the staff must ask the volunteers to get the map), and then go straight to the German Pavilion after entering the park (you can ask the volunteers, or run with the crowd, everyone generally goes to the popular pavilion), so that the German Pavilion is estimated to be 40-60 minutes (if you get up early, it will be earlier), and at nearly 7 o'clock in the evening or later, you can go to the Swiss Pavilion to line up Take the cable car, at that time, it is basically 60-90 minutes, and the British Pavilion is not very recommended for you to go, It is said to be very general, if you really want to go, you can pick 11-12 noon to go when everyone is eating You can go to the queue and avoid the ** peak. If you go to the queue early, if you are lucky, there is also a reservation ticket for the China Pavilion. It's 50,000 tickets a day, and there are armed police at every entrance.

    I recommend the Italian Pavilion, which is very beautiful and the queue is fast (sometimes the armed police will wait a little longer).

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The Skansen Park Open Air Museum is worth a visit, as it was built in 1891 and is the world's first open-air museum. Traditional buildings from the 18th and 19th centuries, including farmhouses, barns, churches, etc., are on display from all over Sweden, showing the folk life of Sweden in the past and the traditions of various parts of Sweden.

    The museum also has a zoo that exhibits animals living in Scandinavia. Skansen Park Open Air Museum is the world's first theme park and museum where you can experience outdoor life.

    In the wave of the Industrial Revolution, the ethnologist Arthur was very worried that the traditional culture of Sweden in the old period would gradually be forgotten, so he contributed money and efforts to relocate many traditional houses, churches, workshops and other buildings from all over the country here, and officially established the Skansen Open Air Museum in 1891.

    The museum has a different event every day, and the specific information can be found on the official website, and if there is a special event ticket, there will be a certain level**. Skansen is one of the main places for foreign guests to visit Sweden and is very representative of Swedish culture.

    If you go to Skansen Park to get to know all the sights, it can take you more than half a day. The museum is built to take advantage of the hillside topography and has a learning area where you can experience traditional crafts with your own hands.

    In addition, the museum also has an open-air ** platform, which often holds wonderful theatrical performances. In 1967, a children's rhyme contest was held here, and the winner was Anne Fred, who would later be a key member of the band ABBA. As the world's first open-air museum, it showcases the full Swedish flair.

    The Skansen Museum is located on a hillside with beautiful scenery. The museum is set in a vast green forest, which condenses the scenes of Swedish life for more than 500 years, and Haselius relocated about 150 buildings of different styles from all over the country built in the last few centuries. The museum presents a complete picture of the history of Sweden in the form of a small village.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    I think the Swedish History Museum is worth a visit, there are a lot of artifacts about this, and you can learn a lot about the history after you go.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    While traveling in Sweden, places like the National Museum of Sweden, the Museum of Modern Art in Stockholm, and the Swedish Historical Museum are all worth visiting.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    A visit is worth a visit to the Oriental Museum, which is located on an island near Stockholm and is a four-story building full of Chinese elements. The museum's collection is dominated by Chinese cultural relics, but also cultural relics from Japan, South Korea, and Southeast Asia. The permanent exhibitions about China include the Yangshao Civilization Exhibition, the Bronze Civilization Exhibition, and the Sculpture Art Exhibition, spanning more than 5,000 years of Chinese history.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    The Stockholms Tunnelbana Museum in Sweden, known as the world's longest art museum, is highly recommended, and more than 100 artists have created different subway spaces with different styles of paintings, murals, sculptures, etc., which are so beautiful that you can't breathe.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    I think the shipwreck museum in Sweden is very interesting, there are a lot of salvaged ships in this museum, which is very interesting.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    The National Museum of Sweden is a must-see, the best of all Europe is in this museum, and you will definitely regret not going.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The Vasa Shipwreck Museum, which was created to exhibit a wreck of the Vasa salvaged from the seabed. The Skansen Park Open Air Museum, the largest museum in Stockholm, is more appropriately a restored village more than 200 years ago rather than a museum. The village recreates the rural scene of Europe during the First Industrial Revolution.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    In Sweden, a visit to the Kafka Museum is a museum dedicated to the famous European surrealist writer Franz Kafka, which is also located in the same place where Kafka was born. The museum displays a lot of information about the life of the great writer and the virtual world he depicted, and it is a pilgrimage site for Kafka fans.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    I think of course it's the Skansen Park Open Air Museum, where you can see a variety of places of interest that will feast your eyes.

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