What other travelers are saying about Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum
A very moving and important place to visit.
You can truly feel the atmosphere the moment you arrive — it’s quiet, reflective, and powerful. We were especially grateful to meet two volunteer guides, one of whom was an A-bomb survivor. Hearing personal experiences brought a human perspective you simply can’t get from displays alone.
It’s not an easy visit emotionally, but it’s an essential one. If you’re traveling in Japan, the Hiroshima Peace Memorial is a must-visit to understand the history and reflect on its message.
Incredible history museum, the only gripe was I went on a weekend, and it was absolutely jammed packed, there were points in the viewing where the pace of walking simply stopped, I will include a photo of the crowd.
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum is the primary institution dedicated to documenting the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. Located in the heart of the Peace Memorial Park, the museum’s mission is to convey the catastrophic reality of nuclear weapons and to advocate for world peace and nuclear abolition. It is divided into two main wings: the East Building, which focuses on the history of Hiroshima before the war and the global nuclear climate, and the Main Building, which houses personal artifacts, photographs, and scientific data directly related to the explosion and its aftermath.
History
The museum opened in 1955, ten years after the bombing, as part of the city’s reconstruction and commitment to becoming a "Peace Memorial City." It was designed by the influential Japanese architect Kenzo Tange, who used modernist principles to create a building elevated on pillars, symbolizing the city’s resilience and its rise from the ashes.
Over the decades, the museum has evolved. Originally, the exhibits focused heavily on the technical and physical destruction of the city. However, following major renovations completed in 2019, the museum shifted its focus toward "human-centric" storytelling. The current exhibits prioritize the personal belongings of victims—such as scorched clothing, lunch boxes, and tricycles—accompanied by the testimonies of survivors (hibakusha) to ensure that the individual human cost of the tragedy is never forgotten.
Notable Features
Artifacts: The collection includes items that were found near the hypocenter, showing the effects of extreme heat and radiation, such as melted glass and "black rain" streaks on walls.
The "White Panorama": A large-scale model that uses projection mapping to show the city before and after the blast, illustrating the total erasure of the urban landscape.
Global Impact: The museum serves as a major educational hub, hosting millions of visitors annually, including world leaders, to promote a future without nuclear weapons.
This museum touches your soul and mind in a way not many museums do. It’s beautifully set-up, and the stories there are heartbreaking and soul crushing. To see what has happened also long after the bombing, how it affected and tore up families. On the other side it shows also hope and determination and the power and resilience of the people of Hiroshima. I haven’t said a word inside, just observed, watched and read and sometimes stood in awe. What a powerful museum this is to visit. The most graphic photos I haven’t posted.
If you consider history and it's impact on the culture,people,emotions, and etc, this is a must to visit place. However the museum is very crowded as I have visited in year end, the peak season of vacation. I recommend visiting on casual days where there is not much people around. Also, might be because of stress, the staff around were yelling for some confusions of them to analyze the tickets. I was shocked to feel this behavior here. "Not from this gate, from there" and I was nearly pushed away. I hope it's only me that this happened. Else, the park is good to visit, the scenario is pleasant. If you think what could have happened, you would once feel the depth of emotions and empathy for Hiroshima and Japan as a whole.
On December 2025 I visited the Hiroshima site and museum. From the very first steps inside, I couldn’t continue… I broke down in tears. The brutality of what happened there overwhelmed me in a way I wasn’t prepared for. It was not easy to hold on without falling apart. Unfortunately I ran out of the museum. 😢 Hiroshima isn’t something you just see and walk away from. It stays in your chest. It shakes you. It makes you question humanity, pain, and how fragile life is. When you stand in that place, you are not only looking at history but you are standing inside someone’s suffering.💔😢 I am very proud of the Japanese, how they rise again and stronger. Their history is marked by instances of recovery and growth, demonstrating an unwavering spirit and a commitment to moving forward🙏