The building restoration has recently secured funds and is expected to begin early next year. Officially it’s expected to reopen partially in late 2022 (Brazil’s bicentennial) and to fully reopen in 2025, but knowing how things tend to go here, you can add a couple years to both dates at the very least. São Paulo’s Museu do Ipiranga sat closed on limbo for six years until restoration work began last year, and unlike Rio’s palace, it didn’t burned down.
williamleclerc567 says
I have been to this museum many times in my life. It was beautiful and full of knowledge about various areas of knowledge, but neglect made it perish
IngoingPrism says
I find myself thinking about this place more lately. Never been though.
IsoscelesDex says
what’s it look like now?
edit: looks like the facade is still there, but yeah it’s a burned out hollow shell.
Our_Own_OP says
Wow. What was lost?
johelh says
You have one actual picture?
KuroArk088 says
National Museum of Brazil
Vitorcmbs says
The building restoration has recently secured funds and is expected to begin early next year. Officially it’s expected to reopen partially in late 2022 (Brazil’s bicentennial) and to fully reopen in 2025, but knowing how things tend to go here, you can add a couple years to both dates at the very least. São Paulo’s Museu do Ipiranga sat closed on limbo for six years until restoration work began last year, and unlike Rio’s palace, it didn’t burned down.
mt-egypt says
Oh fuck, that was the place!?