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The IKEA Museum is a museum located in Älmhult, Sweden, that opened to the public on June 30, 2016. [1] It presents the history of the Swedish furnishing company IKEA . [ 2 ] It replaced IKEA Through the Ages (located in the Corporate Culture Center 'Tillsammans'), a smaller 800 m 2 exhibition that showed 20 different room settings with IKEA ...
The museum was founded in 2017 [2] or 2018 [3] in Frihamnen area of Stockholm by Kersti Sandin Bülow & Lars Bülow. In 2022, the museum permanently closed, [ 4 ] but two years later IKEA bought the museum and moved it to Älmhult .
This page was last edited on 29 October 2024, at 21:50 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
IKEA continues to have a large corporate presence there. [3] [4] A museum of IKEA's history, the IKEA Museum, opened in the town on 30 June 2016. [5] It was constructed to present the history of IKEA. [6] Visitors to Älmhult can also experience the IKEA Hotel, which opened in 1964. It is near IKEA's offices and opposite the IKEA Museum.
Interior of Antique Furniture & Wooden Sculpture Museum in Milan. A furniture museum is a museum with exhibits relating to the history and art of furniture. This is a list of articles about notable furniture museums. Many other types of museums also host furniture exhibits.
Feodor Ingvar Kamprad (Swedish: [ˈɪ̌ŋːvar ˈkǎmːprad] ⓘ; 30 March 1926 – 27 January 2018) was a Swedish billionaire business magnate best known for founding IKEA, which he founded in 1943 and grew into a multinational retail company that became the world's largest furniture seller in 2008.
This page was last edited on 20 January 2016, at 18:39 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The foundation owns the private Dutch company INGKA Holding, based in Leiden, which is the holding company that controls 372 of the 432 outlets of IKEA. [6]In an explanation of IKEA's complex corporate structure, Ingvar Kamprad stated to the authors of a Swedish documentary that tax efficiency was "a natural part of the company's low-cost culture". [2]