One of Turkey’s most comprehensive private museums, Koç Museum showcases the most unique works at its indoor and outdoor exhibition areas.
The museum, which opened its doors in 1994 featuring a special collection of distinguished works, is positioned on the shores of Haliç. Covering an area of 27 thousand square meters, this cultural treasure is comprised of three main sections.
This splendid museum is devoted to the history of transport, industry, and communications in Turkey. Founded by the top of the Koç industrial group, one among Turkey’s most prominent conglomerates, it exhibits artifacts from Istanbul’s industrial past and is very interactive, making it a very enjoyable destination for those traveling with children.
The museum's collection is extremely eclectic, giving the impression of it being a grab-bag of cool stuff that's been collected over the decades or been donated to the museum by individuals, organizations, or companies that didn’t know what else to try to with it. This might sound like we’re damning the place with faint praise, but this is often removed from the case — of course, we highly recommend a visit here.
The museum is in two parts: a replacement building constructed around a 19th-century dockyard on the Golden Horn side of the road, and a restored and converted Byzantine stone building called the Langerhans. The latter was used as a foundry by the Ottomans , and now houses a planetarium and an outsized collection of model trains and boats. The exhibits concerned with type of transport are particularly fascinating: you'll be able to admire an enormous collection of mint-condition classic cars; climb aboard historic trams; take a cruise on a restored 1936 steam tug (summer weekends only);
Enter the cabin of a 1942 Douglas DC-3 Dakota; board a 1944 US naval submarine (advance bookings essential); or take a brief trip on a working narrow-gauge railway (summer weekends only).
Rahmi Koc Museum is open everyday except Mondays between 9:30 am and 5:30 pm. Admission costs 21 Turkish monetary units.
The most enjoyable thanks to reach the museum is to require the Halic Hatti (Golden Horn Route) ferry from Eminonu, Karakoy or Uskudar to Haskoy.
Exceptional interpretive councils in Turkish and English are provided. There's also a Turkish restaurant right on the waterfront, a restaurant during a renewed 1953 ferry boat, and a French restaurant within the Langerhans. Children’s playgrounds and carousels are successful with little ones. Holders of a Museum Pass Istanbul receive a tenth discount on the worth of their ticket.