The Museum Industriekultur (Museum of Industrial Culture) is a museum in Nuremberg dedicated to the industrialization process that the city has undergone from the 19th century until today. Opened in 1988, it is a museum of technology, culture and social history. The museum's collection is very diverse: along a road-like access axis, the museum displays several reconstructions of historic commercial complexes, such as commercial and residential premises, a workers' club, a grocery store and a dentist's dental practice. 1930s. Other exhibition units include reconstructions of a printing workshop, a pencil workshop, a plaster factory, and a steam engine that once supplied the entire panel factory with electricity. Processes such as the development of cinema, the process of house mechanization and the increasing use of telecommunications are also shown. Complemented by historic vehicles and machines, the individual museum units illustrate the slow transition from an artisanal to an industrial society. The focus is not only on the development of Nuremberg industry and its structural change, but also on the influence of industrialization on people's lives, including daily life, living and working conditions, as well as art. and culture.