Turku Sights

  1. Aboa Vetus & Ars Nova Museums

    These twin museums are under one roof. Ars Nova is a museum of contemporary art with temporary exhibitions, the highlight of which is the Turku Biennaali, a themed jury-voted display held in summer in odd years. Aboa Vetus is an absolutely fascinating museum of live archaeology.

    Read more about Aboa Vetus & Ars Nova Museums

  2. Cathedral Museum

    The cathedral museum displays models showing different stages of the cathedral's construction from the 14th century, as well as medieval sculptures and various valuable religious paraphernalia.

    Read more about Cathedral Museum

  3. Ett Hem Museum

    Ett Hem Museum preserves a wealthy turn-of-the-20th-century home, with furniture of various styles, and works by famous painters Albert Edelfelt and Helene Schjerfbeck.

    Read more about Ett Hem Museum

  4. Forum Marinum

    This excellent maritime museum is set back from the riverfront near the castle. The permanent exhibition is housed in an old granary and has a comprehensive look at different aspects of ships and shipping, including scale models, full-size vessels - check out the hydrocopter, WWII torpedoes and multimedia displays (including a puzzling account of a Crimean War naval engagement in which not very much happened!).

    Read more about Forum Marinum

  5. Luostarinmäki Handicrafts Museum

    The name 'handicrafts museum' gives little indication of how fascinating this open-air museum really is. It is made up of the only surviving 18th-century area of this medieval town - Turku has been razed by fire 30 times - and all the buildings are still in their original locations, unlike most Finnish open-air museums where the buildings are moved from elsewhere, or re-created.

    Read more about Luostarinmäki Handicrafts Museum

  6. Museum Ships

    Outside the Forum Marinum, anchored in the river, are four museum ships which you can climb aboard and poke around in, above and below deck.

    Read more about Museum Ships

  7. Qwensel Apteekkimuseo

    On the riverfront this, the oldest surviving wooden house in Turku, was built around 1700, and now houses the small Pharmacy Museum. You can see an old laboratorium with aromatic herbs, fine 18th-century furnishings with hints of 'Gustavian' (Swedish) style, and an exhibition of bottles and other pharmacy items.

    Read more about Qwensel Apteekkimuseo

  8. Sibelius Museum

    The Sibelius Museum displays some 350 musical instruments from around the world in a landmark 1960s building, and exhibits memorabilia of the famous Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. It is the most extensive musical museum in Finland. You can listen to Sibelius' music on record or, better still, attend a Wednesday evening concert (every Wednesday from September to May, less often in summer).

    Read more about Sibelius Museum

  9. Turku Art Museum

    Recently re-opened, the excellent Turku Art Museum is in a striking granite building with elaborately carved pilasters, conical turrets and a polished iron hat. The majority of the art is from the last century or so; the 'Turku school' was one of Finland's most influential art movements; look out for works by Ilmari Kaijala and Emil Rautala among others.

    Read more about Turku Art Museum

  10. Turku Biological Museum

    In a beautiful building, the Turku Biological Museum is surprisingly interesting and superbly presented, if you don't mind staring at stuffed beasts.

    Read more about Turku Biological Museum

  11. Advertisement

  12. Wäinö Aaltonen Museum

    The Wäinö Aaltonen Museum displays permanent exhibitions of this famous artist's paintings and sculptures. Its temporary exhibitions are of contemporary art.

    Read more about Wäinö Aaltonen Museum