Small Carpathian Museum

The Small Carpathian Museum (aka Little Carpathian Museum) in Pezinok, Bratislava, Slovakia, is a local museum with an emphasis on wine making.[1]

Small Carpathian Museum in Pezinok
Building of The Small Carpathian Museum in Pezinok, M.R.Štefánika 4
Location within Bratislava Region
Small Carpathian Museum (Slovakia)
General information
TypeMuseum
LocationBratislava region
AddressM. R. Štefánika 4
902 01 Pezinok
Town or cityPezinok
CountrySlovakia
Coordinates48.286983°N 17.270686°E / 48.286983; 17.270686

Overview

The museum was reopened to the public on 18 November 2008 after two years of renovation. By using European Union funds and funds from the founder, the Bratislava self-governing region, the museum’s building has undergone a complete reconstruction.[2] The institution is being shaped as a regional museum with a strong accent on viticulture, grape growing and notably wine from the Small Carpathian viticulture region.

The museum features a tour of the cellar exposition with the biggest collection of viticulture presses in Europe, temporary exhibitions on various topics, workshops for schools and Small Carpathian wine tasting in the unique premises of the museum. It is one of the organisers of the St. Urban event, the Richard Réti Memorial international chess tournament, the Ceramic market and it is one of the stops during the Open Cellar Day on the Small Carpathian Wine Road. Together with the civic association Museum Vinorum, it is an organiser of the Pezinok Wine Cellars. The museum also organises temporary exhibitions abroad (e.g., the Vinohrady, wine and people exhibition presented in September 2005 in the European Parliament in Strasbourg and later in Vienna and Milotice, Czech Republic).

The institution has its own sommelier along with professional employees and technical staff.

Facilities

Tour of the cellar exposition

The exposition is focused on introducing viticulture and grape growing in the region of the Small Carpathians using multimedia as a modern communication means. After consulting professionals, a friendly application of modern design elements in the ancient cellar premises was used, however only in those cases where it did not interfere with the atmosphere and character of the area.

The tour uses light, sound, tasting, and other interactive activities. There is an aroma bar where it is possible to smell typical local wine. The exposition includes the biggest collection of wine presses in Central Europe.

Tasting Small Carpathian wines

At the end of the exposition tour, there is a tasting of cultivar wines of the Small Carpathian region in the cellar premises.

References

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