Hubschraubermuseum Bückeburg

The Hubschraubermuseum Bückeburg (Bückeburg Helicopter Museum) is located in the German town of Bückeburg, 30 miles (50 km) to the west of Hannover. The museum is the sole museum in Germany specialising in rotary-wing flight and one of few worldwide. The museum is dedicated to the history and technology of the helicopter.[1]

Hubschraubermuseum Bückeburg
Established1971
LocationBückeburg, Lower Saxony
TypeAviation museum
Visitors30,000 (2017)
DirectorDieter Bals
Websitehttp://www.hubschraubermuseum.de (English)

History

Sergeant Major Werner Noltemeyer gathered parts, models, books and photographs of rotary-wing aircraft while he was training to become a helicopter pilot in the German Army Aviation Corps. In 1959 the German School of Army Aviation was established in Bückeburg. In the late 1960s, the city council of Bückeburg offered Noltemeyer an old timbered-framed building for use as a museum which opened in 1971. Due to a shortage of space an additional exhibition hall was added in 1980. The museum was further expanded with a glass addition in 2011.

Model of Leonardo da Vinci's aerial screw invention
Flight Simulator for virtual flights by visitors
New cubic building in 2011

Hubschrauberzentrum e. V.

The Hubschrauberzentrum e. V. (Helicopter Centre Association) - founded in 1970 - is an organisation of volunteers that operates and maintains the museum. The association maintains an extensive archive and a library for scientific study of the history of rotorcraft.

Exhibits

Displayed in the museum are single and multi-rotor helicopters, gyrocopters, gyrodynes as well as numerous helicopter models, historical photos, working models of rotors, technical demonstration and teaching material, parts, tools or equipment for helicopters. A helicopter simulator is available for museum visitors.

Single-rotor helicopters

Exhibits include the following helicopter types:

Multi-rotor helicopters

Gyrocopters

Gyrodynes

Helicopter simulator

  • for virtual flights by visitors

See also

Related lists
  • List of aerospace museums

References

  1. History Retrieved:11 July 2016

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