Nagasaki atombombemuseum
Nagasaki atombombemuseum
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ITRT
Virginia46 564 bidrag
okt. 2024 • Venner
Visit the Atomic Bomb Museum to gain a better understanding of the history of Nagasaki before and after the dropping of the “Fat Man” atomic bomb. Built in 1996, most of the museum is underground under a glass dome. There is a sloped hallway leading to the entrance on the first basement floor. Inside the center of the circular entrance is a message translated means “Harmony is Precious”. The three sections of the museum include exhibits showing the damages caused by the bombing, artifacts related to the bombing, and a section on the effects of nuclear testing and the call for a world free of nuclear arms.
Upon entering the museum, one of the first items is the broken wall clock stopped at 11:02 AM when the bomb was dropped. Photos of Nagasaki before the bombing. In the first exhibition room, a mangled water tower that was located at the Keiho Junior High School. The school was located less than a half mile from the bomb’s hypocenter. Other large objects located on the right side of the room include twisted steel pieces, parts of buildings and rails. At the far end is a reconstruction of the front of the Urakami Cathedral and a few small artifacts and statues. There are photos of radiation injuries to humans, pieces of burnt clothing, broken toys, bones of a human hand in glass, and to many more to mention. The second room displays a timeline of events that led up to the development of the bomb. One of the most prominent items is a model of the “Fat Boy”, the nickname given to the bomb. The back of the model is open to show a cross-section of the interior of the bomb. The last room deals with post-war development of nuclear weapons.
The interactive map showing Nagasaki before and after the dropping of the bomb is quite impressive. It shows the extent of the blast.
Throughout the museum and beginning with the chain of cranes on the wall in the entrance, you will see paper cranes. Chains of cranes are made and donated to the museum by school children and serve as a symbol of peace and hope.
Because we were on a tour, we did not have time to visit and/or listen to video testimonials, short movies about the bombing, visit the library and gift shop. Admission to the museum is 200 yen.
Upon entering the museum, one of the first items is the broken wall clock stopped at 11:02 AM when the bomb was dropped. Photos of Nagasaki before the bombing. In the first exhibition room, a mangled water tower that was located at the Keiho Junior High School. The school was located less than a half mile from the bomb’s hypocenter. Other large objects located on the right side of the room include twisted steel pieces, parts of buildings and rails. At the far end is a reconstruction of the front of the Urakami Cathedral and a few small artifacts and statues. There are photos of radiation injuries to humans, pieces of burnt clothing, broken toys, bones of a human hand in glass, and to many more to mention. The second room displays a timeline of events that led up to the development of the bomb. One of the most prominent items is a model of the “Fat Boy”, the nickname given to the bomb. The back of the model is open to show a cross-section of the interior of the bomb. The last room deals with post-war development of nuclear weapons.
The interactive map showing Nagasaki before and after the dropping of the bomb is quite impressive. It shows the extent of the blast.
Throughout the museum and beginning with the chain of cranes on the wall in the entrance, you will see paper cranes. Chains of cranes are made and donated to the museum by school children and serve as a symbol of peace and hope.
Because we were on a tour, we did not have time to visit and/or listen to video testimonials, short movies about the bombing, visit the library and gift shop. Admission to the museum is 200 yen.
Skrevet 19. desember 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Tony E
Switzerland603 bidrag
nov. 2024 • Venner
Together with its - larger - sister museum in Hiroshima, this is a compulsory place to visit! The first atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the second only three days later on Nagasaki. Both bombs were designed to explode in the air, to maximise the area of destruction and the number of deaths. Descending the spiral slope into the underground museum is like descending into hell. The exhibits include bent and deformed metal girders, photos of the victims, both of the bombing itself and of cancer patients lethally injured by the radiation and dying years later; a clock which stopped at the moment of the explosion, a life-sized model of the bomb. Although the museum makes no judgements, one is forced to ask why this bomb was necessary; there was no way the Japanese government could have reached the inevitable decision to surrender unconditionally in only 72 hours following the Hiroshima bomb. Whatever one's opinion on the necessity of the first atom bomb, the people of Nagasaki did not have to suffer and die.
Skrevet 4. desember 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
PencilSharpener
東京1 006 bidrag
sep. 2024 • Venner
I felt the need not to turn away from the facts. What actually happened and what happened? I want as many people as possible to know.
Skrevet 28. november 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
123TEM
Jakarta, Indonesia211 bidrag
nov. 2024 • Venner
I finally got the chance to visit Nagasaki as I mentioned in my review on Hiroshima back in Dec 2019. The museum and the peace park, well captured the horrific and dark day on 9 August 1945, shattering all dreams and future at the time of people of Nagasaki. Hope the younger generations who were taking notes as school assignment and the world will always remember and prevent this dark day ever happen again.
Skrevet 3. november 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Poorjar
San Jose, CA1 352 bidrag
jun. 2024 • Alene
They don't make the museum overly dramatic or solemn. Instead the museum is mostly focused on the facts: What does Nagasaki looked like before the explosion, what happens after the explosion, how people reacted and helped each other, how the city recovered etc. A bunch of artifacts are on exhibition. The second part of the museum is like a science museum. It talks about the history of nuclear weapons, how it works, nuclear tests and developments etc. It's a very educational museum that's thought provoking. There's also a corner where you can listen to the survivor's stories.
Skrevet 28. oktober 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Lidia R
São Paulo, SP814 bidrag
sep. 2024 • Familie
Nagasaki, very beautiful city, easy to pick up the bus, we visited the Peace Park, the atomic bomb museum, we took Peace coffee, we visited the megane bridge, we ate the best pizza at Pietro inside the Amu shopping near the station, we went to shopping and we found the Village Vanguard store (this store disappeared from Tokyo). For one day only worth the trip. It was very hot the day.
Skrevet 20. oktober 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
MCC
South West England, UK913 bidrag
apr. 2024 • Par
At the entrance, on a plinth is a statue in memory of school children and teachers. The hydrogen bomb exploded 600 feet above the ground at 11.02 am on 9th August 1945. The most part of Nagasaki was destroyed by a 10 foot long, weighing 4½ tons, with the power of 47,000 lbs. of TNT, called fatman. Fat Man detonated at an altitude of 1,650 feet over Nagasaki. The impact was devastating. Everything within a mile of ground zero was annihilated. Fourteen thousand homes burst into flames. People were vaporised; those unlucky enough to be just outside that radius received horrific burns and, there and further out, radiation poisoning that would eventually kill them. Perhaps 40,000 people were killed by the initial detonation. By the beginning of 1946, 30,000 more people were dead. And within the next five years, well over 100,000 deaths were directly attributable to the bombing of Nagasaki. The museum is much smaller than that at Hiroshima but the horrors of bombing are replicated. A must visit while in Nagasaki.
Skrevet 26. juli 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
ETflyer
Fukuoka, Japan42 405 bidrag
jul. 2024 • Alene
Although it was a weekend, there were no school trips or group visitors from overseas, so we could observe quietly. It is an impressive building with a spiral loop just after entering. Tickets were bought from a vending machine and scanned at the entrance gate with a QR code, which seemed a bit different from when I came before.
Skrevet 24. juli 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
MomRocco
Chicago, IL543 bidrag
mai 2024 • Par
We visited the peace museum that commemorates the lives lost when an atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. The museum was very moving and the grounds outside were beautifully maintained. When our group visited the museum itself was very crowded and there didn't seem to be any air conditioning or air circulating. Maybe this was on purpose so that visitors had a sense of not being able to breath.
Skrevet 24. mai 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Global-Villagerr
Denver, CO357 bidrag
mai 2024 • Par
A very good museum, worth every minute you spend here. But if you read carefully, you will see the history presented before WW II is pretty one-sided/ incomplete. The Japanese aggressions in Russia and China prior t o 1931 are not even included. If we are to avoid the horrors of the past, we must be completely honest about what everyone did.
Skrevet 14. mai 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
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Skrevet 22. november 2024
Train or bus from Hakata station to Nagasaki. If you get off at Urukami, you will be just a little north of the museum, not far at all to walk. If you get off at the Central Nagasaki Station, get on the electric tram and go just a few stops north to the Museum. In either case, the museum will be a couple of blocks plus one block uphill (toward the near mountain) from the stop, as the tram line runs one street over from the Peace Park. The museum is a big red brick cube up on the hill.
Skrevet 5. januar 2020
Hi there! going to visit Fukuoka in Jan 2020. I would like to see the Atomic Bomb Museum. Is it free?
Skrevet 4. november 2019
Not free, but pretty cheap. Adults 200 yen I think, kids 6-12 half the adult price. It may have gone up, my info is old.
Skrevet 5. januar 2020
Ciao mi sai dire quanto tempo è necessario per la visita? Ti ringrazio anticipatamente
Skrevet 2. august 2018
Hello,
Could I please ask if you can walk to the museum from cruise port / with directions?
Or tram directions? Maybe a taxi would be best method from port?
Thank you
Skrevet 28. august 2017
Too far to walk. You can do it by tram but you will need to change. Taxi is easier.
Skrevet 29. august 2017
Sylvie M
Mont-Tremblant, Canada
Comment peut-on se rendre par nos propres moyens du port de Nagasaki au musée de la Bombe Atomique??
Skrevet 25. august 2017
How many visitors does the museum have each year?
Skrevet 22. juni 2017
Sorry it's not something a traveller would usually know but feel free to ask the organization themselves
Skrevet 25. juni 2017
Hi,
What is the recommended length of visit?
Thanks
Andrea
Skrevet 7. desember 2016
I would suggest 2.5-3 hours total is sufficient for the museum. There can be crowds at some exhibits and all are worth viewing, take your time to read the placards presented in several languages. Arrive early if you're in a rush, and beat the crowds to save time.
Skrevet 7. desember 2016
Hi can anyone tell me if it is okay to buy your tickets at the gate or best to get your tickets online if online how do you find the website to get them?
Skrevet 13. september 2016
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