
Museum of Senses Prague
Entry Ticket
Duration
1 Hour
The Experience
Prague usually leans into its alchemist past with dusty libraries and spooky alleys. But the Museum of Senses Prague takes a different route. Located on Jindřišská street in the New Town, this place uses science to mess with your head. Forget magic. Here, it’s all about optical tricks and sound games. You’ll walk through 50 interactive exhibits that make water flow uphill and turn flat floors into deep pits. It’s loud, dizzying, and a bit weird. The experience is built on edutainment. That means you'll learn about neurology and physics while laughing at how easily your brain gets fooled. The building itself has a history too. It used to belong to the industrial Baťa family. They even kept a stable from 1852 inside. It’s a fun break from Gothic cathedrals. Go if you want to doubt your own eyes for an hour.
Experience the Tour




The Architecture of Illusion and Cognitive Mechanics
This place is basically a lab for your brain. It uses shortcuts in your head to make you see things that aren't there. When your eyes see one thing but your body feels another, you get confused. That’s the point. Take the Ames Room. It looks like a normal cube, but the floors are slanted and the walls are crooked. Because you expect right angles, your brain decides the people inside are actually growing or shrinking. It’s a trip. Then there's the RGB Room. It uses colored lights to show how your eyes process shadows. Simple science, but it works every time.

Somatic Engagement and Vestibular Disorientation
Looking at stuff is one thing. Feeling it is another. The museum wants you to move. It’s about proprioception. That is how you know where your limbs are without looking. Sometimes that system breaks. The Vortex Tunnel is the best example. You walk across a still metal bridge while a tunnel spins around you. Your eyes say you’re rotating. Your ears say you’re standing still. The result is instant vertigo. If you’re feeling brave, try the Bed of Nails. You lie on 1,209 sharp points. It doesn't hurt because your weight spreads out perfectly. It’s physics, not magic.

The Historical Tapestry: Industrial Heritage and the 1852 Stable
The building at Jindřišská 939/20 has deep roots. It belonged to the Baťas, the famous Czech shoe family who changed how things were made in Europe. Putting a science museum in an old industrial space is a classic Prague move. Look for the stable from 1852. They found it while fixing up the place and decided to keep it. It’s painted with 3D art now. You can pretend to feed a horse that isn't really there. It shows that people have been playing with perspective long before VR headsets existed.

Mythology Meets Modernity: The Return of the Golem and Digital Augmentation
Prague loves a good legend. Most people know the Golem, the giant clay man from the 16th century. The Museum of Senses Prague brings him back using tech. It’s a mix of old Bohemian folklore and modern screens. You can actually interact with the story. They also have the Mimiko Game. You scan QR codes around the rooms to solve puzzles on your phone. It keeps things interesting if you’re traveling with teenagers. It’s not just a gallery. It’s a game that forces you to look closer.

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Experience Starts At

Location Guide
Nové Město (New Town)
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