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Magallanes Regional Museum

Magallanes Regional Museum
This Museum in the historic center of Punta Arenas provides an insight into the life of the city’s wealthy inhabitants during the boom years of the early twentieth century.

Services:

  • Audio guide
  • Disabled access
  • Guided visits
  • Floor map
  • Public transport
  • Parking

Address:

Magallanes 949, Punta Arenas, Chile.

Opening times:

October-April: Wed-Mon 10:30am-5 pm, Sun & holidays 10:30am-5pm; May-September: Wed-Mon 10:30am-2pm, Sun & holidays 10:30am-2pm

Admission:

Free
About the institution

The Magallanes Regional Museum opened in 1982 in what was formerly the home of the local Braun-Menéndez family. However, its history dates back to 1969 when the Patagonia Museum was founded, thanks to the work of Roque Esteban Scarpa, an academic and writer from Punta Arenas.

The current Museum brings together the Patagonia Museum's valuable archaeological and natural science collections with the furniture and other objects still contained in the Braun-Menéndez family mansion when it was donated to the state in 1984.

The building

Dinner room in the Braun-Menéndez family mansion.

Dinner room in the Braun-Menéndez family mansion.

The mansion was designed in the neoclassical style by French architect Antoine Beaulier, who also worked on other important buildings in Punta Arenas. It was built between 1903 and 1906 and, with an area of 2,212 square meters, has two floors, an observation tower and a basement.

In line with the customs of the time, many of the building materials as well as the furnishings were imported from Europe.

The mansion was very advanced for its time and had central heating and double glazing against the Magallanes Region's cold winters as well as hot running water in all the bathrooms. The mansion, with its gardens and their centuries-old trees, was declared a National Monument in 1974.

Inside the Museum

The Museum's 14 rooms are divided into two themes:

  • Life in the Family Mansion. Eight of the rooms, including the basement, are much as they were when the house was still inhabited by the family. They include the entrance hall, the gilded room (the hub of the family's social life), the adjoining music room and the master bedroom.
    Much of the furniture was acquired by the couple on trips to Paris. However, it also reflects other trends that were fashionable in the early twentieth century such as the use of the English style with Indian touches. The kitchen, still with much of its original equipment and utensils, was remarkably modern for its time as were the servants' bathrooms with hot and cold running water.
  • History of the Magallanes Region. This exhibition in what was once the children's part of the house sets out the Region's history from the arrival of its first indigenous inhabitants through to the consolidation of Punta Arenas. These rooms contain archaeological, ethnographic and historical pieces.

The Museum also has a Heritage Photographic Archive, with more than 40,000 images illustrating everyday life in the city from 1895 onwards, and a Heritage Library that includes the journals of explorers and travelers as well as personal letters and other documents of great historical value that belonged to Mauricio Braun.

Don't miss

The painting "Scenes with Geese" which hangs in the dining room is the work of Spanish artist José Ruiz Blazco. His son, Pablo Picasso, often helped his father put the finishing touches to his paintings and, in this case, is thought to have worked on the legs of the geese.