We are a trusted seller of Google, ensuring quality and reliability
Get your booking confirmed instantly
Free admission: Children under 140cm (inclusive) in height are admitted free of charge (valid ID must be presented on-site). Seniors aged 70 and above are admitted free of charge (valid ID must be presented on-site). Business hours: 07:30-21:30
The content of this product is provided by machine translation and may not reflect the actual information, please take this into consideration before booking.
The Tsingtao Beer Museum is located in the old factory building of the Tsingtao Brewery, which was built a hundred years ago. The red houses are very charming. On the roof of a house near the road, there are rows of large beer cans, which are particularly eye-catching. In the museum, you can learn about the history of Tsingtao Beer, see the old equipment for producing beer, and taste the authentic Tsingtao Beer.
Entering the gate, the first thing you see is a square. In the center of the square is a statue with the Arabic numeral "100", named "Ode to the Centennial", which was erected on August 15, 2003 to welcome the centennial birthday of Tsingtao Beer. To the west of "Ode to the Centennial" is a fountain composed of beer bottle and wine glass statues. There is also a statue of the god of wine on the square.
The brewing process area introduces the production process of beer and displays the raw materials and old equipment used to produce beer. In simple terms, the beer manufacturing process is to saccharify raw materials such as malt at high temperature to make wort, then ferment, filter, and finally package. Here you can see the main raw materials for beer making, various malts, auxiliary raw materials hops, saccharification workshops, fermentation tanks and large wooden barrels for fermentation, and packaging lines for putting beer into bottles or cans. Among them, the saccharification pot made of handmade copper in the saccharification workshop and the earliest existing Siemens motor in the world are the "treasures of the town hall." The motor was made in 1896 and can still run after being powered on.
These tickets can't be rescheduled or cancelled.