TITANIC – The Artifact Exhibition
PVA Expo Praha Letňany, Prague
200–1350 CZK · ≈ 8–56 €
The exhibition "Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition" brings to Prague authentic artifacts recovered from the depths of the Atlantic. Visitors will walk through replicas of actual cabins, peek into the engine room, and come face to face with an iceberg they can touch.
At the start of the tour, each visitor receives a boarding pass of a real Titanic passenger – at the end of the exhibition, they learn whether their character survived. On display are personal belongings of passengers and parts of the ship itself: technical equipment, tableware, jewelry, and perfume bottles that still smell today. The tour includes a free audio guide narrated by the voices of passengers.
The Prague exhibition is the most comprehensive version ever presented in the Czech Republic. It features a large immersive projection zone with ship interiors, dramatic moments of the sinking, and a dive to the present-day wreck. For children, there is an adventure trail "Quest for Ocean Treasures" filled with tasks and riddles.
FLEXI and VIP Fast Track tickets are available. The exhibition also offers guided tours with commentary:
May 17, 2026 at 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM – Women on the Titanic
Guided tour with Mgr. Gabriela Nácarová, professor of history and German language. The tour will take visitors through the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries from a woman's perspective – exploring changes in technical, cultural, and political aspects, as well as transformations in women's daily lives depending on their social status. The tour includes stories of selected women who were aboard the Titanic.
May 31, 2026 at 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM – Special Combined Guided Tour: Titanic and Its Era + Women Aboard the Titanic
Mgr. Gabriela Nácarová will explore the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries from a woman's perspective and the transformation of her daily life. Mgr. Evžen Nácar, professor of history and social sciences and lecturer at the National Technical Museum, will introduce visitors to the broader historical context of the Titanic's voyage – the waning Second Industrial Revolution, migration waves, and the beginning of World War I.