What other travelers are saying about Nagasaki Shipyard Museum
If you have your own car and want to come here, you have to park at Nagasaki Station and wait for its bus to pick you up and take you to the museum. Check the time table of the bus before planning your trip to here. I ended up not being able to make it here so the star I gave is for the arrangement of the company.
Great to visit the Mutsibushi Heavy Industries Museum, it is a fantastic centre for understanding the heritage of the company. As an Engineer the most interesting exhibit at the museum was a piece of a steam turbine rotor. The exhibit shows a 9 ton piece which is only a quater of the total rotor. Due to a manufacturing defect the rotor catastrophically failed and was thrown 800 meters away. The importance of the lessons learned from the investigation into the failure and the resulting changes to the casting process is what Engineering is all about. Great place to visit. Thanks for your hospitality.
Advance reservation is required through the Nagasaki City Tourism Department or authorized tour operators. The museum is within an active industrial facility with security protocols, so walk-in visits are not permitted.
Historical photographs, ship models, construction tools, technical drawings, artifacts from battleships and ocean liners, the 130-meter No. 3 Dry Dock from 1905, and views of the working shipyard.
Photography restrictions apply in certain areas of the active shipyard for security and proprietary reasons. Check with tour guides regarding permitted photography locations.
The facility constructed warships for the Japanese navy, passenger liners, cargo vessels, and commercial ships throughout its 165-year history, continuing modern shipbuilding today.
Access is limited to designated tour areas for safety and security. The guided tour includes the museum, No. 3 Dry Dock, and specific viewing platforms only.