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Not to be confused with the Pilsener Urquell Factory mentioned earlier on this list or muddled with the Pilsen Historic Underground which lies directly below the Brewery Museum. The Brewery Museum is strictly a historic museum, and not an active brewery. As such, the focus is much more on seeing how beer used to be brewed, rather than how modern beer such as Pilsener Urquell is brewed today. It exhibits medieval fermentation cellars, turn-of-the-century pub houses as they used to be, a 15th century Gothic malt shop, where grain and malt was heated, dried, and stored, and some random exotica, most notably what they claim to be the smallest jug in the world, mustering a full one centimetre height. You can also find a “steam” brewery, capable of batch producing beer, and giant dark Siberian tankards. Mannequins populate all the displays from various historical periods. Located a convenient walk from the main square, since the Brewery Museum sits right on top of the Pilsen Historical Underground, a combo ticket can be had to save on admission―well worth it if you have the time, and like the tour of the Pilsen Historical Underground, admission also earns you 300 millilitres of Pilsner Urquell beer!
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