The museum is named after these two fairy tale heroes. Museums for fairy-tale heroes. Fairytale house of Owl, Rabbit and Cat in Gorky Park

0+

The fairy-tale world of carved Russian towers, patterned turrets and painted “gingerbread houses” exists not only in cartoons! Young guests of the Izmailovo Kremlin will enjoy an excursion to the Museum of Russian Toys and classes in art workshops, adults - the Museum of Russian Vodka, the Bread Museum, an antique market and ethnic souvenir shops.

Izmailovskoe highway, 73zh

Fairytale house of Owl, Rabbit and Cat in Gorky Park

In Gorky Park there is a corner of the magical forest, in which, as expected, fairy-tale characters live. The inhabitants of the log house, reminiscent of a hut on chicken legs - the Wise Owl, the Rabbit and the Cat - are able to “come to life” under the influence of special mechanisms and tell entertaining stories to young guests.

st. Krymsky Val, 9

Children's Wonderland Park

What can children do while their parents are shopping at the Retail Park shopping center? Of course, visit the Park of Miracles - a fabulous Russian village in the middle of the metropolis! Here you can walk among carved towers with turrets and basements, play in the playground, feed goats, pigs and birds in the mini-zoo, take part in an animated show and learn how to paint ceramic toys.

w. Varshavskoe, 97

Egg house

The unusual house in the shape of a Faberge egg was built in 2002 and immediately turned into one of the brightest landmarks of the capital. The four floors of the original house contain residential apartments, a hall, a sauna and access to an underground garage. You can climb to the attic via a spiral staircase or a special elevator.

st. Mashkova, 1/11

House-teremok

The house-teremok was built in the “Russian patterned” style, typical of merchant and boyar houses of medieval Rus'. Carved platbands, cornices and turrets create a fabulous ensemble that seems to have been transported to a Moscow alley from distant epic times. However, the “relic” nature of the house is only external; inside its premises are furnished quite modernly and equipped with all the technical innovations of the 21st century.

1st Khvostov lane, 5

Sculpture "White Rabbit"

The meeting with the White Rabbit from the famous fairy tale by Lewis Carroll became the beginning of the story that led the girl Alice to Wonderland. Muscovites are convinced that a magical bronze Rabbit with a clock in his hands, settling in an ordinary metropolitan courtyard, helps true romantics realize their deepest desires. To start the “magic mechanism” of happiness and good luck, just touch the cane in his paws.

st. Shcherbakovskaya, 54

Literary courtyard "Krylov's Fables"

The world of funny characters from Krylov's fables really exists! In a fabulous literary courtyard, located among Moscow high-rise buildings, live characters familiar from childhood: a crow with a piece of cheese in its beak, a cunning fox, an unlucky musical quartet of a goat, a donkey, a bear and a monkey, a greedy pig gnawing on the roots of an oak tree. Stone animals are children's favorite playmates and a kind of moral and philosophical reminder for adults.

st. Otkrytoe shosse, 2

House of merchant Igumnov

The mansion of merchant Igumnov is famous not only for its carved columns, turrets and hipped domes in the Russian Art Nouveau style, but also for its abundance of legends and tales. It is known that in 1901 Igumnov organized a shocking social ball in his mansion, lining the floors with gold chervonets. And they also say that in one of the walls fairytale castle The owner's former mistress was walled up, and her ghost still roams the halls of the mansion...

st. Bolshaya Yakimanka, 43

Dragon house in the Moscow region

The boarding house in Pirogovo is created in the shape of a mythical dragon meandering among the trees. The environmental project of the famous architect Totan Kuzembaev does not violate the integrity of the natural landscape. The roof of the building smoothly turns into a grassy lawn, panoramic windows and glass walls of the veranda allow you to feel like an integral part of the surrounding nature.

Mytishchi district, Klyazminskoe reservoir village, building 3-a

Museum of Russian Fairy Tales "Once Upon a Time" 0+

The Museum of Russian Fairy Tales is a collection of wonderful and instructive stories that preserve folk wisdom for many centuries. On interactive excursions, children dress in Russian folk costumes, immerse themselves in an atmosphere of magic and, helping fairy-tale characters, learn to solve difficult moral problems in practice. Events for children 3-12 years old can be attended by appointment.

w. Izmailovskoye, 73zh, st. 2nd Parkovaya, 18

Museum of Pinocchio and Pinocchio 0+

In the Museum, children will meet the frivolous but kind and brave wooden man Pinocchio and his Italian twin brother Pinocchio, the wise Cricket, the romantic Girl with blue hair, and the noble black poodle Artemon. Interactive excursions and performances introduce kids to the best fairy tales world and allow you to transform into fairy-tale heroes who fight evil and defend the truth.

st. 2nd Parkovaya, 18

Cheburashka Museum

The characters from Eduard Uspensky's fairy tale, Cheburashka and the crocodile Gena, are favorites of many generations of Russian children. Bronze heroes of a popular fairy tale greet young guests on the site in front of the museum dedicated to a kind magical animal with huge ears. The museum contains more than 100 images of Cheburashka, made from various materials - painted, plasticine, ceramic, rag.

st. Dmitrievskogo, 3a, kindergarten №2550

Sculptural group “Make way for ducklings”

A touching mother duck with a brood of ducklings appeared in the park opposite Novodevichy Convent back in 1991. Heroes of the popular American fairy tale“Make Way for the Ducklings” was given by Barbara Bush to the children of the Soviet Union as a sign of love and friendship. The Moscow duck family is an exact copy of the sculpture composition installed in Boston. According to legend, petting the smallest duckling will bring you good luck.

Sometimes the heroes of fairy tales become so real that they feel cramped between the bookshelves. They leave the pages of their favorite books, turn into monuments, walk the streets of cities and even make cozy homes for themselves. Then museums dedicated to fairy-tale characters appear all over the world, where children and adults flock as if on wings. After all, who doesn’t dream of being in a fairy tale at least for a moment?

“Fairy tales are like old friends, you need to visit them from time to time,”- American writer George Martin once said. Don't waste a minute!

Moominvalley, Finland

On Kailo Island, off the coast Finnish city Naantali hides between the dense crowns of trees the magical Land of the Moomins. The museum was opened in 2003, and since then it has been a favorite vacation spot for local children. You will also enjoy looking into Moomin houses, climbing the tower, and running around on unusual bridges and stairs. There is a blue Moomin's house from the book, a yellow Hemulen house with a collection of butterflies, a witch's hut, and a bathhouse.

Friendly characters from popular books by writer Tove Janson walk around the museum's surroundings, delighting young visitors. You may meet Little My or Sniff, Moominpappa or Moominmama.

The summer theater regularly hosts performances and shows. The museum occupies an entire island and is connected to the old part of Naantali by a bridge. And you can get here by a special Moomin train.

Little Prince Museum, Japan

Surprisingly, the museum of a little hero with a big soul, created by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, is located not at all in Paris or Provence, where the writer is from, but in... the Japanese village of Hakone.

Cozy French houses and cafes will transport you to France even thousands of kilometers from the author’s homeland, and bright thematic paintings will immerse you in magical world works.

In the museum you will see not only exhibits dedicated to the Little Prince, but also to his creator. Original photographs, letters and diaries will reveal to you new facts from the writer’s biography.

Baron Munchausen Museum, Latvia

Do you know, dear friend, that the most truthful storyteller in the world - Baron Munchausen - is not a fictional character, but a real person. He lived in the 18th century and even visited Ukraine.

The Baron Munchausen Museum is located in the Latvian manor Dunte. The owners of the estate claim that it was here that the best years of the life of the baron and his wife passed. Here he pulled himself out of the swamp, planted a cherry tree between the antlers of a deer and flew to the Moon riding on the cannonball. It was here that I found my soul mate - the daughter of the owner of the estate.

A five-kilometer path with bizarre wooden monuments leads from Munchausen’s house to the sea: a hare with eight legs, flying fish, etc. The atmosphere of his time is created in the baron’s museum. The house is filled with hunting trophies, and at the entrance guests are greeted by the owner of the house himself, albeit in the form of a wax figure. But who knows, maybe she comes to life at night?

Harry Potter Museum, England

Miracles make your eyes widen. Fans of Harry Potter can spend hours wandering among the mysterious scenery of the film: stroll through Diagon Alley with a bunch of shops, sit at the dining tables Great Hall, see Mr. Weasley's flying car, and also learn how the portraits on the walls come to life in the frame.

The highlight of the museum is the Hogwarts school castle, or rather its model, 2.5 m high. Torches burn on the castle towers, and special lighting changes night to day every 4 minutes.

After walking through the halls of the film studio, you can have a snack in the “Sweet Kingdom” and buy a broom, a magic wand or a robe as a souvenir.

Mary Poppins Museum, Australia

If you love the work of Pamela Travers, visit the Australian city of Maryborough. It was there, in the writer’s homeland, that a house-museum dedicated to her work was opened. In front of the house you can see a monument to the author famous story about Mary Poppins. And not far from the estate is a coastal park, very similar to the one described in the books about the sorceress nanny.

If you arrive here on time summer holidays, be sure to visit the Mary Poppins Festival. During the holiday, races for local nannies are held here, steam locomotives are launched, and competitions are held kites and drawings on the asphalt. It will be fun!

An amazing and fabulous place must be visited by every parent who comes to the capital with their child. And if you are a resident of Moscow and have not yet visited the Buratino-Pinocchio Museum, then this is completely unforgivable. Here you can immerse yourself in the amazing, fantastic world of this well-known story.

Visiting Buratino

Arriving at the Pinocchio-Pinocchio Museum, you can wander around amazing world, where these heroes lived, or book excursions. They are themed here, for every taste - “Papa Carlo and his dolls”, “Pinocchio and Malvina meet friends”.

With the help of the museum staff, you will actually visit the country of Buratinia. Few people will refuse such an offer. You can stroll along the narrow Italian street where the now famous carpenter Papa Carlo lives in his closet. Be sure to visit him. Or try to find the treasured golden key on your own in the pond where Tortilla the turtle lives.

The children will be told in detail about Pinocchio, the ancestor of Pinocchio, who was invented by the Italian storyteller Carlo Collodi in 1883. And also about its Russian counterpart Buratino, which Alexei Tolstoy wrote about in 1936.

It is surprising for both children and adults that it was not only in Russia that storytellers imitated Collodi. There are similar plots, for example, in German fairy-tale literature - this is Otto Bierbaum's Zepfel Kern. You can learn this and much more about your favorite childhood heroes if you come to the Pinocchio-Pinocchio Museum.

Pinocchio and his friends

Together with his friends, the main character of the fairy tale is ready to conduct various excursions for visitors.

IN new program At the museum, children will be able to meet the beautiful Malvina, who will teach the restless Pinocchio and all the children who come to visit him the basic rules of etiquette. For example, how to behave at the table, in the theater, at a party, how to communicate politely with each other. So this excursion will be not only interesting, but also educational.

The main thing that is advised to everyone who decides to visit the Buratino-Pinocchio House-Museum is to carefully read the fairy tale again in advance. Then it will be even more interesting and fun.

How to get there?

The Buratino-Pinocchio Museum is located in Moscow. To get there, the easiest way is to take the metro, the Arbatsko-Pokrovskaya line. You will need to get off at Izmailovskaya station. This is between "Pervomaiskaya" and "Partizanskaya".

It’s not difficult to find the Buratino-Pinocchio Museum. 2nd Parkovaya Street, building 18. If you are coming from the center, then it is best to get off from the last car. This way you will immediately find yourself on 2nd Parkovaya Street. You can walk to the museum from the metro. It will take no more than 5-7 minutes walking.

The museum is open every day, seven days a week. Opens at 10 am and is open until half past five in the evening. You need to visit it by appointment, so be sure to inform us about your visit in advance. Also, one more nuance - you need to have replacement shoes to visit the Pinocchio-Pinocchio Museum. After all, you will go directly to visit fairy-tale characters, and when visiting, it is customary to take off your shoes. Well, or wear clean shoes.

The ticket price will be 600 rubles. If the visit is collective, for example, a whole class, starting from 15 people, came to visit Malvina, then they will be given a 10 percent discount.

Also, children from large families will pay 100 rubles less, even if they come for an individual excursion.

There is good news for organizers of visiting children from boarding schools. They won't have to pay for a ticket at all.

Among the first books that parents read to their children, there are always fairy tales - funny, kind, scary, magical, instructive. Children read about Kolobok and Ryaba the Hen, older children read about Cinderella and the Steadfast Tin Soldier, Ivan Tsarevich and Vasilisa the Wise, Pinocchio and Mary Poppins. The heroes of fairy-tale books, cartoons and films are so loved by children that they migrate into their games and even become role models. Since the fairy tale often visits children, why not pay the fairy tale a return visit?

Kidpassage has prepared for you a selection of information about interesting museums fairy tales and storytellers. By including any of these museums in your excursion route, you will delight your children and together with them you will be able to immerse yourself in fairy world childhood.


House of Fairy Tales “Once Upon a Time” (Moscow, Russia)

You only have to say two words - “Once upon a time ...” - and the children will already prick up their ears, preparing to hear the fairy tale. And in the House of Fairy Tales you can also become a fairy-tale character yourself by trying on his costume during theatrical excursions. Such excursions are dedicated to Russian and Western European folk tales, epics and mythology, and author's fairy tales. Participate in the development of the plot, change it, fill it with new adventures and victories, create an old fairy tale in a new way - children will be able to do all this in the House of Fairy Tales. And besides, where else will you have the opportunity to feed the Serpent Gorynych or climb into the stove with Baba Yaga?

Note that excursion programs prepared specifically for children of different ages. The creators of the House plan to open a network fabulous museums. There is already a Pinocchio-Pinocchio Museum. Children with bated breath follow in the footsteps of the heroes of the fairy tale about the golden key, finding themselves either in Papa Carlo's closet, then by the pond where Tortilla lives, or in Malvina's cozy house. And soon the Museum of Russian Fairy Tales will start operating.

Museum website, photo: http://www.domskazok.ru/


“Fairy Tale House” (St. Petersburg, Russia)

If you look closely, the “Fairy Tale House” is not a house at all, but a whole fairy-tale country in which Ole Lukoye and the Golden Fish, Koschey the Immortal and Karabas-Barabas, the Three Bears and Puss-in-Boots live side by side. In this country there is also a place for little lovers of fairy tales: after all, they too can overcome all dangers, solve tricky riddles, complete tasks and make sure that the fairy tale ends happily. Traveling through the fantastic halls of the “Fairytale House”, the children will end up in Koshchei’s cave, listen to the steps of the scientist’s Cat, sit on the beds of Mikhail Ivanovich, Nastasya Petrovna and Mishutka, and master the control of Baba Yaga’s stupa. And actors in the guise of fairy-tale characters will help them get used to the fairy tale. Now there are two “Fairy Tale Houses” in St. Petersburg (on Gorkovskaya and on Pionerskaya).

Website, photo: http://www.skazkindom.ru/


“Glade of Fairy Tales” (Yalta, Ukraine)

No matter how good the scenery is, we still remember how many times fairy-tale heroes wandered through fields and dense forests. Therefore the museum is under open air The “Glade of Fairy Tales” has settled under the canopy of trees, and how can one not believe that this is a real fairy-tale forest. Here are collected sculptures of characters from various fairy tales: the mighty hero Svyatogor and the resourceful Zaporozhye Cossacks, the wretched Old Man with his Old Woman and the cheerful Khoja Nasreddin, Ellie with her faithful friends - the Scarecrow, the Woodcutter and the Brave Lion, a bunch of inhabitants of Teremok and many other characters from folk tales , fairy tales by Russian and foreign writers. For advice or help, as usual in fairy tales, here you need to go to Baba Yaga - she lives in a traditional hut on chicken legs. Maybe Yaga will first ask a tricky riddle - but since Ivan Tsarevich coped with her tasks, then the children will cope too. The summer theater also hosts fabulous performances.

Museum website, photo: http://polyana-skazok.org.ua


"Junibacken" (Stockholm, Sweden)

If, hearing the name Astrid Lindgren, you remember Carlson and Pippi Longstocking, then after visiting this museum you will probably want to read other books by this writer with your children. Lindgren's characters - mischievous inventors and dreamers - inhabit the museum. There are also characters from books by other Scandinavian writers - museum visitors meet them on Fairy Tale Square. On the playground, you can visit Pippi at the Chicken Villa to have fun with the mischievous red-haired inventor, and visit the houses of other fairy-tale characters. And the Fairytale Train will take you to visit the girl Madiken, to Emil from Lenneberga and suddenly soar into the air to turn onto the roof of Carlson, pick up Nils and the geese and go together to Roni, the robber’s daughter, and the Lionheart brothers. During the trip, you can listen to stories about all these heroes in Russian. The museum also hosts theatrical performances and game exhibitions.

Museum website: http://www.junibacken.se, Photo: http://www.facebook.com/Junibacken

Moomin Valley Museum (Tampere, Finland)

In the cozy twilight that reigned in the Moomintrolls’ home when it was time to hibernate, there is a museum where illustrations for Tove Jansson’s books about these well-fed handsome men and their friends are collected, as well as models of episodes from fairy tales about Moomintroll, Sniff , Snusmumrik and others. But the main attraction is the five-story Moomin house, 2.5 meters high, and you can look into every corner of it. And there is something to see there - there is even a treasure hidden in one of the nooks. Based on the museum collection, a multimedia program “Primordial Moominvalley” has been created, which allows you to wander through the fabulous Moominvalley and meet its inhabitants.

Museum website, photo: http://muumilaakso.tampere.fi/ru/


Moomin Park (Naantale, Finland)

Kailo Island is no different from the other islands off the coast of Finland, except that on its shore you can meet Moomintroll collecting shells for his mother. Here is located theme park, which is inhabited by the heroes of fairy tales by Tove Jansson. The Moomin house in the park is huge, you can visit all the rooms, even look into the kitchen for a treat. There are also the homes of other fairy-tale heroes here - Snusmumrik’s camp, Hemulen’s house and even Morra’s icy house. Friendly characters - Little My, Hemulen and, of course, the entire Moomin family - meet visitors and take pictures with them. In summer, guests have at their disposal a swimming pool and a children's beach, and in winter there is ample space for skiing and sledding.

Museum website, photo: http://www.muumimaailma.fi


Andersen Museum (Copenhagen, Denmark)

The famous children's storyteller, sitting down at the entrance to the house and looking at the fun in Tivoli Park - this is what the monument to Andersen looks like at the entrance to the museum. In the attic of the house where this wise and sad writer lived, his office has been recreated, Andersen himself sits at the table, and the view from his window is almost the same as it was several centuries ago. Surprises and surprises await visitors in the museum - a meeting with Thumbelina, a difficult journey following Tin soldier and mocking observation of the Naked King, who, showing off in front of the mirror, seems to be fully dressed. Thanks to 3D animation, you can find yourself in the atmosphere of Andersen's fairy tales.

Breteuil Castle (Rambouillet, France)

The Breteuil family is very famous in France, but its castle, built at the beginning of the 17th century, attracts many tourists not so much because of the history of the ancient noble family, but because of the fabulous atmosphere: the castle houses a museum of fairy tales by Charles Perrault. And it is inhabited by wax figures of characters from fairy tales beloved from childhood: Puss-in-Boots, who is plotting a new trick (there are more than 20 cats here - the fairy-tale cat, we remember, was omnipresent), Sleeping Beauty waiting for her prince, Cinderella dressed up for the ball, the villain Bluebeard and many others. In addition, the castle depicts scenes of important historical events for the French. In the castle park you can wander through the boxwood labyrinth, relax by the pond or have a picnic on the lawn. On Sundays, scenes from various fairy tales are performed here. The castle is especially beautiful during the Christmas and Easter holidays.

Museum website, photo: http://www.breteuil.fr/en/Perrault-Fairy-Tales/seven-fairy-tales.html


Brothers Grimm House Museum (Steinau an der Strasse, Germany)

Typical German half-timbered buildings - white walls, brown beams; near the house there is a tree in the shade of which there are wooden benches. This is the house where the Brothers Grimm, world-famous storytellers, lived. More precisely, two of them were storytellers, and the third, a musician and engraver, created many illustrations for his brothers’ fairy tales. His works, as well as drawings by other artists, are presented in the museum. And also old and new books in different languages, the plots of which are familiar from childhood: “The Town Musicians of Bremen”, “Hansel and Gretel”, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” and many others. The house combines the simple life of the Grimm family with modern interiors, also inhabited by characters from their favorite fairy tales. Even the wolf who threatened Little Red Riding Hood bares his teeth, but does no harm.

Museum website, photo: http://www.brueder-grimm-haus.de

Let us mention in passing that we have developed an entire route - “ German road fairy tales", passing from Bremen, where the cat, dog, donkey and rooster gained fame, to Hanau, hometown Brothers Grimm. The 600 km long road connecting the magical medieval cities goes past the castles of Cinderella, Snow White and Rapunzel, past the domain of Lady Blizzard, through Hamelin, where the Pied Piper lived, and Bodenwerder - the estate of Baron Munchausen.

We think that a visit to one of these museums will result in your bookcase or film collection being replenished with new good fairy tales!