Automuseum PROTOTYP tickets & tours | Price comparison

Automuseum PROTOTYP

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Fast, tactile, and full of racing lore, Automuseum PROTOTYP turns a red-brick HafenCity factory on Shanghaiallee into a close-up journey through rare sports cars, engine sound, and 80 years of motorsport ambition. You can stand near icons like the 1939 Porsche Type 64, try the Porsche 356 simulator, and still be steps from Speicherstadt.

If your date is fixed, book standard admission online first: it keeps your HafenCity route flexible and leaves guided tours for groups who want deeper racing stories.
There are currently no available offers.
Some experiences and attractions are seasonal and might close temporarily.

6 tips for visiting the Automuseum PROTOTYP

1
Buy online for an easier start
If your Hamburg day is already planned, buy the museum ticket online before you reach Shanghaiallee. You can usually enter during opening hours without a long wait, but skipping the desk step helps on rainy HafenCity afternoons. That way you save the calm for the cars.
2
Arrive before late afternoon
If you want the full 1- to 2-hour loop, aim to arrive by about 4 pm, not at last admission at 5:30 pm. The simulator, audio box, and cellar-gallery details can easily slow you down in a good way. You leave with more engines and less clock-watching.
3
Pair one neighbor nearby
If you want a compact HafenCity day, pair the museum with either Internationales Maritimes Museum Hamburg for ships or Speicherstadt for canals, not both plus every big indoor stop. The museum can stretch when the simulator is free. One neighbor keeps the route enjoyable.
4
Travel light inside
If you are coming from Hamburg Central Station, leave large luggage elsewhere and keep a €1 coin for the lockers. Coatracks are free, but large bags and umbrellas stay out of the exhibition. That avoids a storage scramble at the entrance.
5
Use the hands-on stops with kids
If you visit with children, build the route around the Porsche 356 simulator, miniature wind tunnel, engine-sound box, and quiz. The cars are not touch exhibits, so these hands-on moments help younger visitors reset. A cafe pause afterward keeps the mood from overheating.
6
Choose weekday mornings for photos
If your priority is clean photos of the Porsche Type 64 or Jordan 191, choose a weekday morning when the rooms tend to feel calmer than rainy weekend afternoons. Flash and tripods stay packed, but close views are part of the charm. You get better angles without waiting for every hood to clear.

How to plan an Automuseum PROTOTYP stop in HafenCity

Automuseum PROTOTYP works best as a flexible 1.5- to 2-hour anchor between Internationales Maritimes Museum Hamburg and the canals of Speicherstadt. The trick is to keep the day tight enough for the neighborhood, but loose enough for the simulator, the vaults, and one unplanned second look at a favorite car.

Start with the regular admission ticket

Best for most visitors: standard admission, because it covers the permanent exhibition, the changing gallery areas, the shop, and the cafe without locking you into a strict timeslot. If your Hamburg day is already mapped, buy online first; if your group wants deeper stories about drivers and engineers, request a guided tour at least one week ahead. Book now.

Use the HafenCity transport triangle

For public transport, think in three easy anchors: bus 111 to Koreastraße, U1 to Meßberg, or U4 to HafenCity Universität. From Hamburg Central Station, the walk is about 20 minutes, which can be pleasant if you want to pass from the city center into the brick-and-water mood around Speicherstadt.

Keep one neighboring stop

Great when you want a focused route: add Internationales Maritimes Museum Hamburg for a two-museum history day, Speicherstadt for a canal walk, or Elbphilharmonie for a viewpoint and evening finish. Families can swap in Miniatur Wunderland or Dialogue in the Dark, but keep the rest of the afternoon light if the museum already runs close to two hours.

Cars, people, and sound in the exhibition

The permanent exhibition is not only a showroom. Across about 2,500 m² (26,900 ft²), it connects rare cars with the drivers, designers, sounds, and risks that made them matter.

Porsche roots and racing icons

The strongest first stop is the early racing line: the VW39, the 1939 Porsche Type 64 Berlin-Rome Car, the Porsche 356/2 Gmünd Coupe, and the Jordan 191 tied to Michael Schumacher's Formula 1 debut. These are not anonymous polished bodies; each car carries a small biography, and the close views make the engineering feel personal.

The human engine behind the machines

The motto Personen.Kraft.Wagen. is the key to the mood here. Stories about Ferdinand Porsche, Otto Mathé, and Wolfgang Graf Berghe von Trips keep the focus on courage, design instinct, and risk. Even if you arrive for the cars, the people behind them are what give the HafenCity rooms their spark.

Hands-on moments for non-gearheads

You do not need to know engine codes to enjoy the visit. The Porsche 356 simulator, the audio box, the miniature wind tunnel, the cinema, and the interactive library turn technical history into something you can hear, test, and laugh about. That is especially useful for families and mixed groups where not everyone speaks fluent horsepower.

A red-brick HafenCity pioneer

Part of the pleasure is the building itself. The museum lives inside a protected former factory, so the visit feels like a piece of HafenCity industrial memory repurposed for speed, design, and chrome.

From rubber works to car museum

The site had factory life as early as 1836, and hard rubber production began here in 1855. The present building rose between 1902 and 1907 for Kautschukwerke Dr. Heinr. Traun & Söhne, formerly Harburger Gummi-Kamm-Compagnie, then was rebuilt after World War II and listed in 2004. When Automuseum PROTOTYP opened in 2008, it gave the old industrial shell a new rhythm.

Why the building changes the visit

The brick, iron details, and vaulted spaces keep the exhibition from feeling like a neutral car hall. You move through a piece of working Hamburg, with Lohsepark behind the museum and Speicherstadt close enough for an easy walk afterward. That local texture makes the polished cars feel grounded, not sealed away.

Special exhibitions and the cafe stop

Changing exhibitions add another reason to check the program before a repeat visit, especially if you follow Porsche, Formula 1, design, or motorsport photography. The cafe Erlkönig is open beyond exhibition visitors, so it works as an easy pause before you step back toward the canals or continue to Elbphilharmonie.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to book Automuseum PROTOTYP in advance?

No. You can normally visit during opening hours without advance notice, and entrance waits are usually minimal. Online tickets are still useful when your HafenCity schedule is fixed.
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How long should I plan for the visit?

Plan 1 to 2 hours for a relaxed first visit. Car fans who read the panels, use the simulator, and linger in the gallery can easily stay 4 hours or longer.
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What are the main highlights inside?

Look for the 1939 Porsche Type 64, the VW39 pre-production Volkswagen, the Jordan 191 linked to Michael Schumacher's first Formula 1 race, the Porsche 356 simulator, and the engine-sound audio box.
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Are guided tours available?

Yes. Guided tours are available in German and English, start from €95, and are best requested at least one week ahead. Last-minute tours may work only when a guide is available.
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Is the museum good for children?

Yes, especially for children who like vehicles, sounds, and hands-on stops. The Porsche 356 simulator, miniature wind tunnel, interactive library, and kids' quiz make the visit more than a line of parked cars.
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Is Automuseum PROTOTYP accessible?

Yes. The museum is barrier-free certified, with step-free or elevator access to all areas and accessible toilets. An accompanying carer can enter free when the relevant document is shown.
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Can I take photos in the museum?

Yes, private photos are allowed. Keep flash and tripods packed, and arrange written approval in advance for commercial use or filming.
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Are lockers or luggage storage available?

There are free coatracks and lockers with a €1 deposit. Large bags and umbrellas should not go into the exhibition area, so store travel luggage before you arrive.
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Can I visit the cafe without a museum ticket?

Yes. The museum cafe can be visited without entering the exhibition, so it works as a small HafenCity pit stop even if not everyone in your group wants the full car-museum visit.
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General information

opening hours

Regular opening hours are Tuesday-Sunday from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm; last admission is 5:30 pm. The museum opens on selected public holidays and some holiday Mondays in 2026, and it is closed on December 24, December 25, and December 31, 2026, and January 1, 2027. Check the current holiday calendar before a Monday or Christmas-period visit.

tickets

Admission prices are:
- Adults: €13
- Children ages 4 to 14: €5
- Family ticket: €28 for 2 adults and up to 3 children
- Adult groups from 10 people: €12 per person
- Children's groups from 10 people: €4.50 per person
Guided tours start from €95 and should be requested at least one week ahead. Hamburg Card holders receive reduced admission.

address

Automuseum PROTOTYP
Shanghaiallee 7
20457 Hamburg
Germany

website

how to get there

The simplest public transport options are bus 111 to Koreastraße, U1 to Meßberg, or U4 to HafenCity Universität. Walking from Hamburg Central Station usually takes about 20 minutes. If you drive, use nearby paid car parks such as Elbarkaden, Überseequartier, or Speicherstadt.

accessibility

The museum is barrier-free certified. Wheelchair users can reach all areas without stairs or by elevator, accessible toilets are available, and an accompanying carer enters free when the relevant document is shown. The easiest accessible stops are U4 HafenCity Universität and bus 111 to Koreastraße.

lockers

Free coatracks and lockers with a €1 deposit are available. Large bags and umbrellas should not be taken into the exhibition area, so use station storage if you arrive with travel luggage.

photography and filming

Private photos are allowed without flash or tripod. Commercial photo use and other filming need written approval in advance.
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