Located in a 19th-century building at 9 Kodrou Street in Plaka, the Museum of Greek Children’s Art is easily accessible from the metro stations serving the area near Syntagma Square.
Located in a 19th-century building at 9 Kodrou Street in Plaka, the Museum of Greek Children’s Art is easily accessible from the metro stations serving the area near Syntagma Square.
Opened in 2004, the Kifissia Archaeological Collection is located in a 1930s house, with exhibits on the main floor and an archaeological laboratory below ground level.
The Jewish Museum of Greece was founded in 1977 by the Jewish community of Athens. Housed at the Melidoni Street Synagogue, this small museum contains objects from World War II and the everyday lives of Greek Jews.
Founded in 1993 by a renowned family of jewellers, the museum officially opened in 1994. Housed in a 1930s building on Kallisperi Street, the facility was previously home to the family’s workshops.
The Ilion Folklore Museum, which opened in 1997, displays an extensive collection of traditional Greek costumes, photographs, maps, domestic utensils, clay tools, glass, and other everyday items from Greece’s rich past.
Located on the eastern side of the port a short distance from the coastguard headquarters, this museum was originally given to the municipality in 1918 and later transferred to the Greek state by local ship owner Gikas Koulouras.
Housed in a neoclassical building in Aegina, this former residence of scholar Panagis Iriotis was given to the municipality of Aegina by his daughter, Polymnia.