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The library is situated in the Kluuvi district, close to Helsinki Central Station and next to Helsinki Music Centre and Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art. Despite its name, the library is not the main library in the Helsinki City Library system, which is located in Pasila instead; [ 1 ] "central" refers to its location in the city centre.
ALESSANDRO RAMPAZZO/GettyI initially went Helsinki’s Oodi Library on a whim. My friend’s son needed another Harry Potter book. And because I find visiting a location in any city I don’t live ...
Library of the Museum Mayer van den Bergh; Library of the Passchendaele Memorial; Library of the Plantin-Moretus Museum; Library of the Royal Army Museum, Brussels; Library of the Royal Institute of Natural sciences; Library of the Royal Museum of Central Africa, Tervuren; Library of the Royal Museums of Art and History; Library of the Royal ...
The Helsinki Music Centre is a concert hall and a music center on Töölönlahti bay in Töölö, situated between Finlandia Hall and the museum of contemporary art Kiasma. The building is home to the Sibelius Academy and two symphony orchestras, the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra .
Helsinki City Library (Finnish: Helsingin Kaupunginkirjasto, until 1910 Helsinki People's Library) is the largest public library in Finland. Owned by the City of Helsinki, the library has 37 branches and a collection of about 1.56 million books. [1] The City Library is part of the Helsinki Metropolitan Area Libraries network.
DIVA Museum for Diamonds, Jewellery and Silver; EcoHuis; Etnographic Museum; Fotomuseum; Royal Museum of Fine Arts (KMSKA) Museum of Modern Art Antwerp (MuHKA) Plantin-Moretus Museum; Museum aan de Stroom (MAS; Museum at the current) Volkskundemuseum; National Maritime Museum; Maagdenhuismuseum (Virgin House Museum) Middelheim Museum ...
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The institution became the Royal Museums of Art and History, a name that was officially confirmed in 1926, and which has remained unchanged to the present day. In 1925, Eugène Van Overloop was succeeded by the Egyptologist Jean Capart , during whose term of office the museums became a leading scientific institution.