The museum is situated on the edge of a small town south-west of Stockholm. Getting here by public transport is straightforward, taking the commuter train nos 40 or 41 26 minute journey from central Stockholm and a short bus trip with no more than 5 mins walking. It is worth checking if open in advance as the opening hours on the museum's website were inaccurate. It was shut when we and several others visited on Sunday 22 June with the website stating regular opening hours were Thursdays to Sundays, and listing it as shut Fri 20th and Sat 21st June but no mention of it being closed as an exception on the 22nd June. If your musuem is in central Stockholm and your opening hours are inaccurate then a visitor can choose to do plenty of other things in the vicinity. But when your museum necessitates a specific journey, then details matter to prevent disappointment.Had we known in advance we would have planned our visit earlier in our stay but are leaving before it next re-opens.
Nice place, interesting museum, no parking problems, good cafe, friendly people...
A museum dedicated to the history of Swedish banknote production, located in one of Europe’s oldest paper mills. It details the evolution of paper manufacturing, security printing, and the economic history of Sweden. Inclues plenty of history on money and currency.
Very easy to get to from Stockholm. Interesting museum in a nice area.
Very good museum explain about history of paper making. It’s both for kids and adults highly recommend.