FC Barcelona Museum

The FC Barcelona museum (Catalan: FC Barcelona Museu) was inaugurated on 24 September 1984 under the presidency of Josep Lluís Nuñez. In 2000, the museum was renamed President Nuñez museum under the presidency of his successor, Joan Gaspart. On 15 June 2010, the museum was reopened after a long restructuring.[1]

Museu FC Barcelona President Núñez
Location within Barcelona
Established24 September 1984 (1984-09-24)
LocationCamp Nou, Barcelona
Coordinates41.380°N 2.121°E / 41.380; 2.121
TypeSports Museum
Visitors1,506,022 (2013)
DirectorJordi Penas
Public transit accessPalau Reial Barcelona Metro line 3
Collblanc Barcelona Metro line 5
WebsiteOfficial website (in English)

The restructuring saw the museum split into three separate sections with a 3D cinema, audiovisual touch-screen, and information on the history of FC Barcelona. Since then the museum can only be visited by booking the package Camp Nou Experience, which includes the entrance to the museum and a tour of the stadium. The first section includes a collection of photos, documents and trophies detailing the club's history on an interactive glass wall, allowing visitors to touch the screens and see information wall. The glass wall, equipped with laser technology, allows the exhibition of video, images and music through user-feedback. The second section is a private art collection on permanent display at the museum which exhibits works by local artists such as Dalí, Miró and Tàpies. In the third section, the Futbolart Collection displays football memorabilia from the club including a trophy-room with every trophy, or a replica thereof, that the club has won.[1][2]

One of the items at display in the Futbolart Collection is the boots with which Ronald Koeman scored the winning goal in the 1992 European Cup Final, which he did in the 111th minute against Sampdoria, 21 minutes into extra time, securing Barcelona's first European trophy.[3]

The museum occupies 3,500 square meters and attracts 1.2 million visitors a year, ranking it second to the Museu Picasso, which attracts 1.3 million visitors, as the most visited museum in the city of Barcelona.[2][4][5]

gollark: What if we ask GPT-3?
gollark: What if we ask that octahedral writer who came up with those random grammar rules in English last century?
gollark: What if we ask someone missing, what is it, Wernicke's area, which is the bit of the brain doing language processing?
gollark: What if we ask speakers of more tightly controlled languages like French?
gollark: What if we ask someone who has somehow not been exposed to the idea of "grammar" and doesn't understand the question?

References

  1. "FC Barcelona Museum". FC Barcelona. Archived from the original on 1 August 2012. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
  2. "FC Barcelona "El Cant del Barça" im Camp Nou (Pressemitteilung 372809)" (in German). Presseanzeiger.de. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
  3. Ross, James M. (17 January 2008). "European Competitions 1991–92". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  4. Stone, Peter (2009). Frommer's Barcelona (3 ed.). Frommer's. p. 201. ISBN 0-470-38747-5.
  5. "Visites per ordre de nom del museu" (PDF) (in Catalan). Generalitat de Catalunya. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
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