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Barcelona · Gothic Quarter

Museu Marítim de Barcelona

Barcelona's Maritime Museum sits inside the Reials Drassanes, Gothic shipyards where galleys were built for Mediterranean conquests from the 13th century onward.

Museu Marítim de Barcelona, Barcelona · Gothic Quarter
Category
Museum
Duration
1h 45m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
€€
Rating
4.4 (12,648)
The place

About Museu Marítim de Barcelona

Barcelona's Maritime Museum sits inside the Reials Drassanes, Gothic shipyards where galleys were built for Mediterranean conquests from the 13th century onward. The centerpiece is an incredible full-scale replica of the royal galley that fought at Lepanto in 1571 - you can walk around it and peer inside at the rowing benches where 236 oarsmen powered this war machine. The museum also covers Catalonia's fishing traditions, transatlantic trade, and modern shipping through the port that still dominates Barcelona's economy today.

The experience flows through soaring stone arches that once echoed with shipbuilders' hammers. You'll start with early navigation instruments and work chronologically through galleries showing how Barcelona became a Mediterranean trading powerhouse. The galley replica dominates the main hall - it's genuinely impressive at 60 meters long, complete with bronze cannons and period rigging. Interactive displays let you test knot-tying skills and explore cargo manifests from colonial voyages to the Americas.

Most visitors rush through in 45 minutes, but you need at least 90 minutes to appreciate the details properly. Entry costs €7 for adults, €5 for students and seniors. The audio guide (€3 extra) is worth it for the galley section but skippable elsewhere. Many people miss that your ticket includes boarding the Santa Eulàlia schooner at Port Vell - it's a 10-minute walk and often less crowded than the main museum.

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The place

Getting there

Address
Av. de les Drassanes, s/n, Ciutat Vella, 08001 Barcelona, Spain
Neighborhood
Gothic Quarter
Nearest Metro
Jaume I (L4)Liceu (L3)Drassanes (L3)
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Enter through the main doors on Avinguda de les Drassanes rather than the side entrance - you'll get the full impact of seeing the galley replica as you walk into the central hall

Most visitors photograph the galley from ground level, but there's an elevated walkway on the left side that gives you perfect shots of the entire vessel without crowds

Visit the Santa Eulàlia schooner first thing in the morning or late afternoon when most tour groups are at the main museum - you'll often have the restored ship entirely to yourself

Plan for about 1h 45m.

Museu Marítim de Barcelona is in the Gothic Quarter neighborhood of Barcelona. The address is Av. de les Drassanes, s/n, Ciutat Vella, 08001 Barcelona, Spain. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

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