The Musée de l'Institut Pasteur de Lille is a museum in Lille. Inaugurated in 2017 by the Institut Pasteur, an important research institute, the Musée de l'Institut Pasteur was created to show the history of the Institute and its founders. The museum is located in the old apartments of Albert Calmette. Within these walls, together with the veterinarian Camille Guérin, between 1904 and 1928 Calmette developed the bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), an attenuated microorganism used as a vaccine against tuberculosis. In addition, Lille is also the place where Louis Pasteur discovered alcoholic fermentation in 1854, right in the science faculty of the University of Lille, of which Pasteur was dean. The museum therefore develops an interesting path that winds through curiosities, workshops of the time and numerical installations, creating a museographic itinerary open to an audience of all types and of all ages.