II. Farmstead No. 61

The guided tour takes in farmstead no. 61 – a residential building with a new permanent exhibition entitled “The Hops that Built Houses”, outbuildings (a wagon shed, a granary, a barn and a fruit drying house).

Opening times

14. 12. - 15. 12. Sat, Sun Vánoce v Zubrnicích 10:00 – 17:00
II. Farmstead No. 61

Admission


Adults 110 CZK
Concessions (students aged 15–26 ; senior citizens over the age of 65) 90 CZK
Children aged 6 - 15 50 Kč
Children to the age of 6 Free
Family admission (max. 2 adults and up to 4 children to the age of 15) 220 CZK
Groups of 15 or more people – basic admission 90 CZK
Skupina 15 osob a více snížené 70 CZK
  • Admission to selected programmes is stipulated on an individual basis.
  • Admission to events for the public is stipulatech on an individual basis.
  • Admission outside the main season (January – March, November – December)
  • Tours outside opening hours/outside the main season are possible only for a minimum of 10 people following prior agreement by telephone/e-mail and with a 100% surcharge over and above the regular admission.
  • Telephone: +420 475 228 267
    E-mail: muzeumzubrnice@nmvp.cz

More information

The guided tour takes in farmstead no. 61 – a residential building with a new permanent exhibition entitled “The Hops that Built Houses”, outbuildings (a wagon shed, a granary, a barn and a fruit drying house).

length: around 45–60 minutes

A guide will accompany you on your tour of all the sites!

The museum is part of the village of Zubrnice, set in the picturesque and dramatic landscape of the Central Bohemian Uplands. The ancient layout of the village square, which is dominated by the originally Gothic Church of Saint Mary Magdalene, has been preserved. The village is characterised by opulent Late Classicist buildings – the consequence of the effective economic exploitation of the local landscape. This involved the cultivation and drying of fruit and the subsequent export of products along the River Elbe to Germany, in particular the lucrative hop trade. Zubrnice has been a protected conservation area since 1995 and makes a particularly attractive impression as a single entity taking advantage of natural building development sensitively complemented by relocated buildings and the unique cultural landscape.

The museum was established as a conservation project, primarily for the Central Bohemian Uplands area, based on village buildings standing on their original sites. These unique buildings will captivate you at first glance. Inside the museum, you will get to see a farmhouse in the village square, a school from the First Republic and a merchant’s store from the 1930s. In Mill Valley, you may be interested in the small working rustic mill and, in particular, the authentic landscape that we are gradually reshaping into the form it took in the middle of the nineteenth century.

In addition to holding large events for the public, the museum also prepares a number of educational programmes, special tours, and exhibitions of traditional folk culture and art. In the main season, you can take a ride on an attractive historical railcar from Ústí nad Labem operated by the Zubrnice Museum Railway Society, which also runs a small museum at the Zubrnice – Týniště train stop.

The museum makes a particularly attractive impression as a single entity taking advantage of natural building development sensitively complemented by relocated buildings and the unique cultural landscape.