Skjoldenæsholm Tram Museum

Skjoldenæsholm Tram Museum (Danish: Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm), also referred to as the Danish Tramway Museum, is an open-air museum dedicated to vintage trams and buses. It is located 65 km (40 mi) south-west of Copenhagen, Denmark, between Ringsted and Roskilde.

Skjoldenæsholm Tram Museum
Tram from Copenhagen (left) and from Melbourne (right).
Established1978
LocationRingsted, Denmark
Coordinates55.5334°N 11.8448°E / 55.5334; 11.8448
TypeTransport museum
Websitewww.sporvejsmuseet.dk (english)

The museum opened on land which belongs to Skjoldenæsholm Castle on 26 May 1978. It was established and is run entirely by unpaid volunteers in collaboration with the Danish Tram Historical Society.[1]

The museum is founded on some of the remains of Sjællandske Midtbane, a railway that was closed in 1936 and went from Næstved to Frederikssund over Ringsted and Hvalsø.

The museum's goal is to preserve and restore trams (and now also buses and trolleybuses) in running condition: Right from the inaugural meeting, the idea of preserving and restoring the fast-disappearing trams was conceived, so that future generations might be able to see and experience the old trams.

Collection

The collection was founded in 1965. It consists mainly of rolling stock and related artifacts from Copenhagen, Aarhus and Odense, the three Danish cities which historically operated tram systems, but also include trams from a number of other countries.

In 2003 the museum took over a collection of historic trams and buses when a museum run by HT (Hovedstadens Trafikselskab), the local bus company in Copenhagen, closed. Several other collections have followed since.

Tram lines

The museum has two tramways. A 300-metre (984 ft) 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) metre gauge tramway is used for rolling stock from Aarhus, Flensburg and Basel. An app. 1.5 km (0.93 mi) 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge tramway is used for trams from Copenhagen, Odense, Malmö, Oslo, Prague, Düsseldorf, Rostock, Hamburg, den Haag, Oslo and Melbourne.

On selected days, vintage buses from Copenhagen, Aarhus and Odense are operated on a circular tour.

gollark: How can you distinguish these "birkeland currents" from the well-known and documented phenomenon of "gravity" and whatever else?
gollark: What does that actually *mean* in practice?
gollark: What predictions does it make which regular people can test easily?
gollark: You say I can experiment too, so... how, exactly?
gollark: Can you actually *give* one instead of just continuously pointing people toward other stuff?

References

  1. "The Museum". Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm. Retrieved 2012-10-01.
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