of industrial production in various sectors (railway, agriculture, aviation, food machinery). They tell the story of what was at times the fourth largest factory in Italy, which - despite recession and
framework. Anchor Points cover the complete range of European industrial history. After that, they tell tourists what they can see at a local level. Visitors of all ages can relive their industrial heritage
artistic printing techniques. The "Modern Paper" department focuses on audiovisual interpretation and tells, among other things, the story of the factory workers. A special museum deals with the history of
Olympics. Galleries show photographs, technical manuals, branded airline furnishings and uniforms and tell the story of aviation pioneers, including the Dutch manufacturer Fokker. Visitors can see a radio
Speakers who are interested in contributing to this question – even from outside the industrial heritage community – are cordially invited to submit an abstract of their presentation in English to the
possibilities of archival documentation can be used to regenerate the "immaterial heritage" in order to tell the evolution of places and build a "sensitive city". Environmental regeneration is certainly one
collection of beautiful shoes, the stories of the workers and a hall of fame of local people. It also tells the story of another local industry, making hairbrushes and fine brushes for other purposes. Close
former dyeshop of the cotton mill houses Työväenmuseo Werstas - the Finnish Labour Museum. The Museum tells the over two-hundred-year-old story of Tampere’s industry. The exhibition describes how Tampere became
District Museum) in the city and served as its director. The museum’s displays include one that tells the story of slave labour under the Nazi regime, and of its links with factories in Wiener Neustadt
transferred to the museum. The main exhibition of the Forssa Museum, the City of Colourful Cloth, tells the story of Forssa community. Museum Gallery Moletti, an atmospheric little gallery, focuses on
the shipowners of Genova and migration to and from Italy by sea. The exhibition about emigration tells the story of the transatlantic liners to New York with a simulator showing a journey from the Strait
cottage" in Vöhrenbach, with the Clock Industry Museum in Schwenningen, whose many fully-working machines tell visitors about everyday life in the factory around 1900. And on your way, if you want, you can watch
electricity grid from 1930 to 1971. The fascinating thing about the industrial museum is that it tells the story of the light factory consistently through the eyes of the people who worked there. Thanks
for guided tours and demonstrations, visits and hands-on activities to showcase their facilities and tell their stories, with water always playing a major role. ERIH sites are also taking part, such as the
Blast Furnace Museum has been set up outside the plant in the historic former pipeline building and tells the story of the steelworks site through objects, old documents, photographs and film footage. For
The Kymenlaakso Museum operates in the Maritime Centre Vellamo in the Old Port of Kotka. The Museum tells stories about life and everyday toil in the border region, about the river and the sea as well as
back to 1904, and even a complete sheet-rolling mill from the middle of the 19th century. The museum tells of the people who came here from all over Europe to earn a living under harsh, and sometimes perilous
which opened in the main wing of the residential complex in 2006 and has been continuously expanded, tells the fascinating story of this social programme with over 6,000 exhibits. Visitors can explore the
killed. The museum has a collection of 43 aircraft and gliders. The indoor section uses images to tell the story of Lithuanian aviation from its beginnings to present day.
interactive permanent exhibition focuses on the interplay between man, nature and the economy. It tells the social and economic history of the region and illustrates the profound changes that industrialisation