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Old 9th June 2025, 06:07   #1
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Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-mbmuseum.jpeg

According to Google, across the world, there are 30+ vehicle manufacturers who have museums dedicated to their brand. And how many of them capture the legacy and essence of the brand through the years? Just a handful. From an automobile museum perspective, Mercedes-Benz is considered one of the best, with a legacy that can be traced back to the world’s first car! Any invitation to visit such an institution becomes a bucket list item for an auto enthusiast!

Last month, when I received a call informing me that there was a trip planned with Mercedes India, I thought it would be yet another new launch or something similar. But when the actual invite was shared, my eyes lit up….a short trip of just one and a half days in Germany, but starting with a visit to the Mercedes Museum. Little did I know that this was a very exclusive event and curated for just 3 people from India, plus a handful of others from across the world - only true blue automobile journalist. One more surprise awaited us when we reached the museum. We were to have our dinner on the museum floor, sitting beside some of the most iconic cars from the Mercedes-Benz collection!

From the museum website:
Quote:
The Mercedes Benz Museum in Stuttgart celebrates the automobile invented by Carl Benz in 1886: it relates its history and tells its stories, bringing both alive by placing them in the context of technology, day-to-day life, social history and popular culture. More than 160 vehicles of all types are the main protagonists. They range from some of the oldest automobiles ever built to legendary racing cars and futuristic research vehicles.

Together with other exhibits, they form the centrepiece of the permanent exhibition covering a total of 16,500 square metres in twelve rooms. This unparalleled world can be discovered on two tours that follow a “Legend” and “Collection” narrative.
Link to the museum website

The building is a marvel in itself, designed as what they term as “double-helix spiral” spanning nine levels! Starting from the top floor (one takes an elevator) and chronologically moving through the spiral walkway, you observe history pass you chronologically, while you descend.

Fun fact: the exhibition starts before the first automobile, and one is greeted by a cute, almost life-like white horse :
Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-horse.jpeg

We had only a couple of hours at the museum, which I felt was gross injustice! One should plan for at least a full day to cover it. There are a few excellent threads already on Team-BHP by BHPians who have had the privilege of visiting this museum. Here are some of the reports:

Report by 14000rpm (Av goes to the Mercedes Museum in Stuttgart | Pics & Report)
Report by EightSix (Mercedes-Benz Museum Tour during Covid)
Report by the_mole (Mercedes-Benz Museum @ Stuttgart)
Report by libranof1987 (The Mercedes-Benz Museum @ Stuttgart, Germany)
Report by shankar.balan (A visit to the Mercedes Museum in Stuttgart | An enduring love affair with The Three Pointed Star)
Report by kunal2202 (Mercedes Benz Museum)

What made this experience super special was that the Mercedes-Benz team had arranged for one of their classic car historians to accompany us through our quick tour, and he had some very interesting historical and fun facts to share. These were being relayed to each one of us through the communicators we were wearing throughout the walk. Now, the challenge is absorbing all of that because one cannot even take voice notes, along with the task of taking pictures. Anyway, I will try to share some pictures of what I could capture in the short duration.

Last edited by Aditya : 9th June 2025 at 06:11.
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Old 9th June 2025, 06:07   #2
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So, let us cut the chase and get right down to business with some pictures.

The grandfather clock - a compact gasoline engine producing 0.8 kW, would technically be the first exhibit you see. It is named so because it resembles a grandfather clock. It weighs 92 kg, which is remarkable for the year 1886, I would say:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-grandfath.jpeg

5 HP Benz 2-cylinder opposed-piston engine. Karl Benz did not develop his first gasoline engine with more than one cylinder before 1897, but in so doing, opted for a new principle. While Daimler and Maybach built their engines with cylinders arranged in a V-shape or parallel, Benz developed an engine family with two cylinders arranged opposite each other. With this design, which he called "contra engine", Benz had created the world's first horizontally opposed piston engine:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-5hp-2-cylinder-opposed-piston.jpeg

5 HP Daimler 4-cylinder engine. Daimler supplied the first four-cylinder gasoline engines to customers as early as 1870 - a 12 HP version with 371 cubic inch displacement and a smaller 6 HP unit with a displacement of 147 cubic inches (on display). Like many of the early gasoline engines, both were used to power boats. 4-cylinder engines were not installed in road-going vehicles before 1898:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-5hp-faimler-four-cylinder.jpeg

To be honest, I never knew Mercedes-Benz also made motorcycles. This one is from 1886, making 0.4 kW and with a top speed of 12 km/h:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-bike.jpeg

From the archives:
Quote:
Gottlieb Daimler registers a patent for a two-wheeled "vehicle with gas or petroleum engine" (patent no. DRP 36 423 issued on 11 August 1886). The test vehicle, producing 0.5 HP / 0.37 kW and also described as "petroleum riding car", is the world’s first motorcycle. On 10 November, Gottlieb Daimler's younger son Adolf, undertakes a maiden journey from Cannstatt to Untertürkheim, reaching speeds of up to 12 km/h.
Who invented airplanes? The Wright brothers, says Wiki, but there is a Mercedes invention from 1888, powered by a similar 1.5 kW motorised airship. This is a replica, though:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-plane.jpeg

From the internet:
Quote:
This airship, powered by Daimler's "Grandfather Clock" engine, made its maiden flight from Cannstatt's Seelberg, landing after about six miles in Kornwestheim. This event is considered by some to be the world's first motorised airship flight.
Benz Viktoria was the first 4-wheeled automobile that Benz made. It came with the invention of a kingpin steering system. Even to date, this steering helps vehicles to corner better:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-reimenwagen.jpeg

The first large-scale productiona car (1200 units were sold between 1894 and 1901) was called the Motor Velocipede:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-velociped.jpeg

Daimler Reimenwagen: 150 of these were built with three inventions from Wilhelm Maybach. You can term it the great-grandad of the current Maybach. Inventions included a spray nozzle carburettor, belt drives, and a Phoenix engine making a whooping 3.4 kW or 4.6 HP!
Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-reimenwagen1.jpeg

Benz Dos à Dos had the first opposing piston engine developed by Benz & Cie. Now, you will wonder what Dos à Dos means? Simple. Occupants are seated back-to-back, unlike other models:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-dos-dos.jpeg

Now, all these cars had one serious flaw. While they needed a few gallons of fuel to run, they used to consume almost 100 litres of water in an hour! This made it torturous to plan a long trip, and this was one of the major grievances that Mrs. Benz had. That led to the invention of a closed-loop water cooling system with radiators! From the first model of Mercedes, most of the flaws were pointed out by Freda Benz. Those were fixed with future models and again vetted by Mrs. Benz!

Craze for motorsport was there right from the early days of automobiles, apparently, and Gentleman Drivers were the term given to wealthy individuals who used to prefer driving to being chauffeured. Fun fact: wealthy individuals would buy cars and race them under pseudo names to avoid bringing a bad name to the family in case things went wrong or if they lost an event.

"What is wrong with this picture?" was the question asked of us. Well, almost everything! This was a typical automobile that would race, and most often, the passengers would fall off the vehicle while taking a corner; sometimes the whole car would topple and whatnot! The problems included a high centre of gravity, seating position, position of engine and axles, and much more. That is how the next era of inventions came into the modern automobile:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-whatswrong.jpeg

40 HP Mercedes-Simplex, the oldest Benz still in existence and the successor to the 35 HP Mercedes by Maybach. It is known as the first automobile of the modern age. The name Simplex denotes the relative ease with which it could be operated (at least for that era):

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-simplex.jpeg

From the archives:
Quote:
The 40 HP Mercedes Simplex, first supplied in March 1902 along with the 28 hp version, dominated the Nice Race Week in April 1902 even more than the first Mercedes had done the previous year. E.T. Stead was victorious in the Nice - La Turbie hillclimb race at an even higher average speed of 55.2 km/h.

"Mercedes Simplex" was the talk of the town and inspired no lesser person than Emperor Wilhelm II to come up with a bon mot. At the Berlin motor show in March 1903, he told Wilhelm Maybach: "A truly beautiful engine you have here! But it's not as simplex as that, you know."

One of the first 40 HP Mercedes Simplex cars was received in March 1902 by the American billionaire William K. Vanderbilt Jr. who already owned a 35 hp Mercedes. In May, he undertook a record attempt in the new Mercedes top model on the road from Ablis to Chartres, where he reached a speed of 111.8 km/h.

Today Vanderbilt's car is displayed in the Mercedes-Benz Museum and is regarded as the oldest Mercedes still in existence.
The tables had been set; we were to dine right beside this installation!

Coming back to the car, the axles were sorted with the right positioning of the engine, seating was lowered, and the passenger position and centre of gravity were lowered. All these were big innovations that led to the modern car as we know it now:

Some rather royal cars. Automobiles were always associated with wealth and aristocracy. Not surprisingly, one could see many kings having some of the best customised cars. This one had an intercom system from the royalty to the driver’s side. Those huge horns on top were from where instructions were passed on. Proper leather customised interiors and machined to perfection:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-royal1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-royaltrumpet.jpeg

This car was made for the Emperor of Japan. He had a communication system operated by buttons in the passenger cabin. Those in turn would alert the driver, with instructions being displayed in the driver’s cabin. Evolution from the trumpet intercoms:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-japan1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-japan2.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-japan3.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-japan4.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-japan5.jpeg

How about some customisation for smokers?

The ashtray- If royal customers wanted to smoke, then Daimler-Motoren-Gesell-schaft obliged. In 1914 the automotive manufacturer equipped the high-performance sedan commissioned by His Majesty King Ferdinand I of Bulgaria with two cigarette necessaires - including a particularly elegant design for use by female passengers. King Ferdinand ordered luxury equipment for the car's interior, although he specified there should not be too much gold. In addition to the canteens with clock, brush, mirror, ashtray and thermometer, the options also included an electric cigar lighter:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-smoke.jpeg

The emblems, aka the jewellery that has adorned the vehicles over the years. You can also see the other accessories and even official cutlery that one could get with the vehicle:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-emblems.jpeg

The world’s most valuable car, anyone?

Quote:
Daimler-Benz developed this closed version of the 300 SLR racing sports car for the 1956 season. Two cars were built. However, they never raced, because the company decided to pull out of motorsport at the end of the 1955 season. Instead, Rudolf Uhlenhaut, head of the test department, repeatedly used them for business trips. Mercedes-Benz Group AG sold the second 300 SLR Coupe to a collector in 2022. The sales price of 130 million Euros makes it the world's most valuable car.
Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern3.2.jpeg

Some more modern cars from Mercedes. Will let just the pictures do the talking here.

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern2.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern3.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern3.1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern4.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-modern5.jpeg

Now, this was an interesting one. Wondering how the real-time testing data logging was done in those days? Test-car in the front and..

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-testcar.jpeg

...this custom-built car for data collection during new vehicle development, following it. The car in front had sensors which relayed the data over the cables connected, and the wagon at the rear had the computers and other equipment that read, stored, and analysed the data:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-datalog1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-datalog-2.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-datalog3.jpeg

This one was an icon when it came to safety - the experimental safety vehicle that was used for the airbag and belt tensioner system. It was made in 1973 before I was born. Pretty much the same system works in modern automobiles:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-abs.jpeg

Pope mobile anyone?

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-pope.jpeg

This bus was a replica made because the company could not find the original bus that ferried the 16 football World Cup participants in 1974. It was completed just before the COVID lockdown. Later, the news came from one of the visitors to the museum, who was a dealer in a South American country, that one of them might be surviving out there:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-footballbus.jpeg

Look towards the chimney tower on the left. Do you see a church to the right of that tower before the crane? That is where Karl Benz is buried! How many museums offer such a view and story to tell?? And now you know why Mercedes chose this area. The view of the old town with many stories associated with this brand makes the whole place very special. It is a cultural spot for the city, and many events happen here. There is a conference facility that can be rented out if you want to conduct company meetings:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-church.jpeg

We were short of time and needed to hurry up if we were to cover a few more exhibits from the collection before it was time for dinner:
Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-dine.jpeg

This shot is from a secret viewing location, which is not open to public otherwise, and those are real crystals - some 48 (or was it 72) hanging! And yeah, that’s our dinner table. After a briefing and some interesting chat over dinner, I decided to do a quick walkaround and take some more pictures. It is a very weird and sometimes eerie experience to walk around a huge museum all alone at night. There are, all in all, about 160 exhibits, and a few of them get updated or rotated around, which means even a quick top-up trip to this museum every few years is worth it:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-crystal-dining.jpeg

Some more interesting cars and other displays from the motorsport floor. I will not even attempt to explain the heritage because that would take another thread and apart from the quick walk around, I could not spend much time here:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-bus.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-ms1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-ms2.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-ms3.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-ms4.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-ms5.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-ms6.jpeg



Mercedes-Benz 320 streamlined sedan - most stylish and offering all-day comfort on the autobahn:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-320-limo.jpeg

190 SL unrestored and was owned by astronaut David Randolph Scott, who in 1971, became the seventh person to set foot on moon:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-astranaut.jpeg

Milnes-Daimler double-decker bus used in London from 1904:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-double-decker.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-doubledecker1.jpeg

Remember this one from the original Jurassic Park?

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-jurasic.jpeg

The Mercedes-Benz 300 SEL 6.3 came out in 1968 as top-of-the-line variant of the W108/109 luxury series, predecessors of today's S-Class:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-sel6.31.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-sel6.32.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-sel6.33.jpeg

A beautifully restored truck:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-truck.jpeg

With the F100, Mercedes-Benz presented its vision of the car of the future at the 1991 Detroit Motor Show. Many innovations in this car were developed to pro-duction maturity at a later stage, among them the rain sensor, the autonomous intelligent cruise control system, the xenon headlamps and the sandwich floor. Other special features of the F 100 are the centrally arranged driver's seat and the novel door concept.

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-f100.jpeg

The F400 Carving was presented by Mercedes-Benz at the 2001 Tokyo Motor Show. It was used to test new dynamic handling control systems in conjunction with active camber control. With this new tech, the outer wheels of the F400 could tilt at an angle of up to 20 degrees while cornering. Hence, the epithet "Carving" with reference to the sporty carver:
Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-f400carving.jpeg

Arial view of one of the rooms:
Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exibition.jpeg

I noticed this magazine and article while walking around, and it refers to India; this was displayed on the walls. Interesting. Telco 1956!

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-india.jpeg

And these are the last lot of images I managed to grab before we were ushered out of the museum:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition7.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition8.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition5.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition4.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition3.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition2.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-exhibition6.jpeg

With that, our day came to an end, and we headed back to our hotel for the night. Beautiful memories for life were made this evening. Alas, it lasted only a couple of hours. I think, if I make it to Germany again, I will definitely plan for a whole day and go over each floor at a much slower pace.

I have tried my level best to add the correct description and narration. Apologies if there are any mistakes/corrections required, do point them out.

And one last thing, did I mention we are going back to the hotel? Guess which one we stayed at?? Folks who have gone through earlier threads would have noticed a mention about the V8 Hotel! Yes, that is where the Mercedes team has arranged our stay! More on that in the next post.

Last edited by Rudra Sen : 14th June 2025 at 11:01. Reason: Space added between captions and images
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Old 9th June 2025, 06:07   #3
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Hello and welcome to a quick preview of V8 Hotels.

I would highly recommend this hotel to automobile enthusiasts visiting Stuttgart. It is about a 30-minute drive to the town, but the whole district is known as Motown. Throughout the day, you will hear the sounds of engines of both high-revving 2-wheelers and gorgeous 4-wheelers.

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel-1.jpeg

Our accommodation was in the superior wing. When you walk towards the building, you will see a restoration outfit that deals in classics besides the hotel door:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel2.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel2.1.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel2.3.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel5.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel4.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel3.jpeg

Walk in towards the reception in the centre, and then, you will see a McLaren showroom and workshop! How cool is that?
Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel6.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel10.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel9.jpeg

There were small easter eggs strewn around the room, and some even art on the walls of my room. There was a chocolate, a miniature car-shaped one, which I shamelessly devoured and forgot to take a snap of. Sorry:

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel11.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel12.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel8.jpeg

Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany-hotel7.jpeg

If that was not enough, then you will see all these while visiting the area. Mind you, the days we stayed in Germany were holidays and all of it, including McLaren and the Classic shop, was shut. Still, we had these groups coming in to grab a bite or drink throughout the day. And in the evening, they have a few tables right in front of the parking area where one can sit and unwind, watching all these beautiful machines parked.

Here's a short video walkaround of the classic shop:



With that, it was the end of day 1. The next day was going to be an early start for us, and we had a few exciting sessions planned.

Disclaimer: Mercedes-Benz invited Team-BHP for this trip. They covered all the travel expenses.

Last edited by Rudra Sen : 14th June 2025 at 11:05. Reason: Space added between captions and images
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Old 9th June 2025, 06:08   #4
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Re: Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany

Thread moved out from the Assembly Line. Thanks for sharing!
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Old 13th June 2025, 02:16   #5
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Re: Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany

Thanks for sharing.

Even though I would not consider myself a real Mercedes fan, despite a 25 year long W123 ownership, I would recommend a visit to the Mercedes museum to anyone.

Its absolutely fascinating, a fantastic building and an extremely carefully curated collection.

My friend Peter and I have visited it twice. Obviously, in our Alfa Spiders!��. Which we parked right in front of the museum. Ze Germans were not amused and we were ordered to remove them? That image is somewhere in one of my threads. Can't remember where.

One of the things I really liked is the endless line up in chronological order of photographs and descriptions of all kinds of important and relevant things happening around d the world. As you spiral from the top floor downwards, you see history passing you by.

Only one W123 in the museum last time we visited. It was a special one,,although I can't really remember what made it special.

Jeroen
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Old 13th June 2025, 20:08   #6
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Re: Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany

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Originally Posted by Jeroen View Post
Thanks for sharing.
===
Only one W123 in the museum last time we visited. It was a special one,,although I can't really remember what made it special.
Thank you, I think you might like the next thread coming up, maybe that's the car and would jog your memories. Give me few days please.
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Old 14th June 2025, 10:51   #7
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Re: Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany

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Originally Posted by Jeroen View Post
T
Only one W123 in the museum last time we visited. It was a special one,,although I can't really remember what made it special.

Jeroen
Was it the 280E that won the London to Sydney Rally in 1977?
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Old 15th June 2025, 00:28   #8
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Re: Night at the museum | A curated visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart, Germany

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Was it the 280E that won the London to Sydney Rally in 1977?
No, I don't think so. I recall something unique to the US market?

Jeroen
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