Central Museum of Textiles
The Central Museum of Textiles, an industrial museum with a rich history, is expanding into an urban open-air museum with six houses. The museum effectively tells history through the perspective of working people and offers a high-quality cultural experience, particularly with its four temporary exhibitions.

Location: Łódź,
Country: Poland
The Central Museum of Textiles in Łódź, Poland, features a permanent exhibition, Microhistories. Łódź and its People, showcasing the lives of Łódź residents from the late 19th century to the 1980s. The museum also offers a hands-on exhibition about 1930s summer holidays and various educational programs.
The residential structures relocated to the museum grounds serve as a natural setting to narrate the lives of their occupants during the city’s textile-making zenith. The narrative unfolds not from the vantage point of colossal factories and industrial establishments but through the lens of the everyday experiences of the individuals, who encompass diverse social groups, ethnicities, backgrounds, religions, and cultures. The Last Summer exhibition stands as the concluding chapter of this urban open-air museum, featuring an historic summer villa relocated from a neighboring resort town. The exhibition delves into the realm of rest and leisure at summer holiday resorts during the 1930s. A stage-setting text at the exhibition’s entrance presents a micro-history that chronicles the fictional family’s summer sojourn in the villa, accompanied by reflections directed directly at the reader. The hands-on exhibition endeavors to create an inviting, convivial, and informative space that stimulates the mind, emotions, and imagination, fostering curiosity and encouraging active engagement with the objects on display. Reprints of original articles and local newspapers from the era provide a contextual backdrop, shedding light on the political, cultural, and social dynamics of the time.
The Central Museum of Textiles, is a robust industrial museum with a rich history. To further expand their offerings, they have embarked on a project to create an urban open-air museum comprising six houses. The museum’s approach to historical storytelling through the lens of working individuals is commendable, and the exhibits are of exceptional quality. The overall cultural offerings are commendable, with particular commendation for the four temporary exhibitions currently on display.
Website: www.cmwl.pl
