What an interesting place to visit. You learn not only about the history of the factory but also the whole process of making wooden toys. I loved it
RobertMay
2019
This is just a tour of a factory, not really a muzeum. For kids there is really nothing to see. You are basically paying to let kids glue together some wood pieces that you have to buy. Skip this if you have small kids.
SheralynMay
2019
Very interesting to visit. Kids loved building their own toys with the off cuts. It was a rainy day so very busy and factory tour was virtually impossible to hear off the prerecorded speaker the guide was holding. But it was still interesting to see how they still operate. Perfect activity for kids if the weather is rainy and the slopes aren't appealing. But if you have young baby or hearing sensitive children maybe bring noise cancelling headphones. Also there are a lot of stairs to climb.
hanickaMay
2019
Overpriced, there really is just one room with a "museum" it's basically visit to the factory, not wheelchair friendly, staff confused about what they are offering, just seems to try to flock the expensive tour, with workers gone by 2pm we wouldn't really see anything but the factory, still baffled, lovely toy store to buy unique wooden toys that is worth going to.
What an interesting place to visit. You learn not only about the history of the factory but also the whole process of making wooden toys. I loved it
This is just a tour of a factory, not really a muzeum. For kids there is really nothing to see. You are basically paying to let kids glue together some wood pieces that you have to buy. Skip this if you have small kids.
Very interesting to visit. Kids loved building their own toys with the off cuts. It was a rainy day so very busy and factory tour was virtually impossible to hear off the prerecorded speaker the guide was holding. But it was still interesting to see how they still operate. Perfect activity for kids if the weather is rainy and the slopes aren't appealing. But if you have young baby or hearing sensitive children maybe bring noise cancelling headphones. Also there are a lot of stairs to climb.
Overpriced, there really is just one room with a "museum" it's basically visit to the factory, not wheelchair friendly, staff confused about what they are offering, just seems to try to flock the expensive tour, with workers gone by 2pm we wouldn't really see anything but the factory, still baffled, lovely toy store to buy unique wooden toys that is worth going to.
Excelent museum definitely recommend to everyone