Amenities at a glance

  • There are tactile models in the Museum hall (next to the cloakroom):
    • the shape of the Palace, which is intended for tactile viewing and is an introduction to a visit to the Museum,
    • the Museum area, including the most important elements of garden architecture.

  • In the cloakroom of the Palace you can borrow typhlographic maps of the Palace and gardens free of charge, tactile catalogues adapted to the needs of people with visual impairment, tactile versions of selected paintings supplemented with audio description, and a guide to the palace and gardens in Braille.

  • The Museum offers a number of events tailored to the needs of people with visual impairment (including museum meetings, walks around the palace, nature walks, workshops).

  • During events tailored to the needs of people with visual impairment, live audio description techniques are employed, and numerous tactile materials and aids affecting the sense of smell and hearing are used.

  • Audio descriptions of selected objects, including descriptions for children, are available on the Museum’s website.

How to get to the museum from the bus stop?

Information about the route to the Museum of King Jan III’s Palace at Wilanów from the bus terminus in Wilanów. We invite you to read the full information and additional audio materials describing several objects passed along the way!
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Braille publications and typhloplans

We have prepared a number of historical and nature publications, as well as typhlographic plans with descriptions in Braille and enlarged font. You can rent them in the palace cloakroom during the palace’s opening hours and read them on site at any pace. See exactly what we have prepared for you.
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Materials with audio description

Visual content is inaccessible to blind people and difficult to access for visually impaired people. The interior museum, which is the Wilanów Palace Museum, is a very visual place. Starting from the view of the palace and gardens, through impressions and information contained in the arrangements of individual interiors, to exhibits presented in various parts of the palace. The sight of all these places and objects is a real dose of information, and for many – unusual impressions and emotions.

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Accessibility coordinator