Vasa Museum


title: "Vasa Museum" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["museums-established-in-1990", "1990-establishments-in-sweden", "maritime-museums-in-sweden", "museums-in-stockholm", "articles-containing-video-clips", "djurgården", "1990s-establishments-in-stockholm"] topic_path: "geography/sweden" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasa_Museum" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox Museum"]

FieldValue
nameVasa Museum
native_nameVasamuseet
native_name_langS
imageStockholm Vasa Museum and Nordic Museum 09.jpg
captionExterior of the Vasa Museum.
established
locationGalärvarvsvägen 14, Djurgården, Sweden
typeMaritime museum
visitors1,495,760 (2017)
1,246,986 (2023)
1,353,453 (2024)
directorJenny Lind
website
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| name = Vasa Museum | native_name = Vasamuseet | native_name_lang = S | image = Stockholm Vasa Museum and Nordic Museum 09.jpg | caption = Exterior of the Vasa Museum. | alt = | map_type = | map_caption = | map_alt = | latitude = | longitude = | established = | dissolved = | location = Galärvarvsvägen 14, Djurgården, Sweden | type = Maritime museum | collection = | visitors = 1,495,760 (2017) 1,246,986 (2023) 1,353,453 (2024)

| director = Jenny Lind | president = | curator = | publictransit = | network = | website = | former_name =

The Vasa Museum () is a maritime museum in Stockholm, Sweden. Located on the island of Djurgården, the museum displays the only almost fully intact 17th-century ship that has ever been salvaged, the 64-gun warship Vasa that sank on her maiden voyage in 1628. The Vasa Museum opened in 1990. Together with other museums such as the Stockholm Maritime Museum, it belongs to the Swedish National Maritime Museums (SNMM).

History

From the beginning of 1961 to 1983, Vasa was housed in a temporary structure called Wasavarvet ("The Vasa Shipyard") where she was treated with polyethylene glycol. Visitors could only view the ship from two levels and the maximum distance was only 5 m (17 ft). In 1981, the Swedish government decided that a permanent Vasa museum was to be constructed and a competition for the design of the museum building was organized. A total of 384 architects sent in models of their ideas and the final winners were Marianne Dahlbäck and Göran Månsson with Ask ("box"). The construction of the new building began on and around the dry dock of the old naval yard with an inauguration ceremony hosted by Prince Bertil on 2 November 1987. Vasa was towed into the flooded dry dock under the new building in December 1987, and during the summer of 1989, when visitors were allowed onto the construction site, 228,000 people visited the half-finished museum. The museum was officially opened on 15 June 1990. Across the two museums, by the beginning of 2025, Vasa has been seen by over 45 million people. In 2024, the museum had a total of 1,353,453 visitors.

The main hall contains the ship itself, and various exhibits related to the archaeological findings of the ships and early 17th-century Sweden. Vasa has been fitted with the lower sections of all three masts, a new bowsprit, winter rigging, and has had certain parts that were missing or heavily damaged replaced. The replacement parts have not been treated or painted and are therefore clearly visible against the original material that has been darkened after three centuries under water.

The new museum is dominated by a large copper roof with stylized masts that represent the actual height of Vasa when she was fully rigged. Parts of the building are covered in wooden panels painted in dark red, blue, tar black, ochre yellow and dark green. The interior is similarly decorated, with large sections of bare, unpainted concrete, including the entire ceiling. Inside the museum the ship can be seen from six levels, from her keel to the very top of the sterncastle. Around the ship are numerous exhibits and models portraying the construction, sinking, location, and recovery of the ship. There are also exhibits that expand on the history of Sweden in the 17th century, providing background information for why the ship was built. A movie theatre shows a film in alternating languages on the recovery of the Vasa.

The museum is in the process of publishing multi-volume archaeological report to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the salvage. Vasa I: The Archaeology of a Swedish Warship of 1628 was published at the end of 2006. The next volume, Vasa. II Part 1: Rigging and sailing a Swedish warship of 1628 The material remains and archaeological context was published in 2023.

The museum also features four other museum ships moored in the harbour outside: the ice breaker Sankt Erik (launched 1915), the lightvessel Finngrundet (1903), the torpedo boat Spica (1966) and the rescue boat Bernhard Ingelsson (1944).

Gallery

Image:Vasa Museum interior1.jpg|The main hall of the museum with a model of Vasa to the left and the ship itself to the right. Image: Vasa Museum ships1.jpg|The four floating museum ships moored outside the Vasa Museum. Image: Vasamuseet 2009d.jpg|Exterior detail of the museum building. Image:The_Warship_Vasa_-_Bow_side.JPG| A side view of the bow of the warship Vasa. Image:Vasa_Top_Deck.jpg|Vasa, top deck and port side, seen from above. File:Vasa museum Vasamuset Stockholm Sweden (148).jpg|Vasa part of stern and port side, from a lower viewing point. File: Vasa museum Vasamuset Stockholm Sweden (149).jpg|Reproduction of the 'Great Cabin' from Vasa's upper gun deck. File: Vasa museum Vasamuset Stockholm Sweden (181).jpg|Leather shoes and boots on display.

Notes

Sources

References

  1. (11 January 2018). "År 2017 blev Vasamuseets mest besökta någonsin". Vasa Museum.
  2. (13 June 2024). "Museer 2023".
  3. "Vasamuseet ökade antalet besök med 9 procent år 2024 och slog besöksrekord i februari, mars och december".
  4. [https://www.vasamuseet.se/en/vasa-history/timeline Vasa Museum Timeline Page], accessed May 10, 2018
  5. [http://www.vasamuseet.se/en Vasa Museum homepage], accessed June 30, 2007
  6. (2006). "Vasa 1: the archaeology of a Swedish warship of 1628". Statens maritima museer ; Oxbow Books [distributör] ; David Brown Book Co [distributör].
  7. (2023). "Vasa. II Part 1: Rigging and sailing a Swedish warship of 1628 The material remains and archaeological context". Vasamuseet ; Nordic Academic Press.

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museums-established-in-19901990-establishments-in-swedenmaritime-museums-in-swedenmuseums-in-stockholmarticles-containing-video-clipsdjurgården1990s-establishments-in-stockholm