It is a European-style building with red exterior walls. It is the former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao. It is the earliest existing post and telecommunications business building in Qingdao.
The museum covers an area of about 2,500 square meters and currently has three floors open: the first floor is the reception hall, antique telephone wall, and souvenir shop; the second floor is the main exhibition hall.
The fourth floor is the Tower 1901 Hall, which is the only century-old wooden tower currently open in Qingdao. The Tower 1901 Hall showcases the construction technology from 120 years ago.
Various telephones can be viewed in the museum, and visitors can learn about the development of Qingdao's post and telecommunications over the past century through pictures and real objects.
Attractions Location: No. 5 Anhui Road, Shinan District, Qingdao City, Shandong Province
Tickets: free
The lobby on the first floor is open free of charge all year round
Opening hours:
09:30-12:00, 13:00-18:00 (Monday to Sunday, May 1st to October 31st)
10:00-12:00, 13:00-17:00 (November 1st to April 30th of the following year, Monday to Sunday)
Contact Details: 0532-82872386
Time reference: 1-3 hours
Discover the fascinating history of communication technology at the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum, combined with a relaxing visit to nearby attractions.
Transportation: Museum is centrally located; walking to May Fourth Square and Qingdao Pier is easy. Taxi rides between spots are under 10 minutes.
Accommodation/Food: Stay near Qingdao city center or May Fourth Square. Dine at seafood restaurants and cafes along the coast.
Souvenirs: Postal stamps, communication-themed memorabilia, local crafts.
Combine a visit to the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum with Qingdao’s cultural and seaside attractions.
Accommodation/Food: Stay downtown or near Badaguan for a quieter environment. Try local seafood and international options.
Souvenirs: Beer memorabilia, traditional crafts, local snacks.
Explore Qingdao’s museums, natural beauty, and historic sites in depth.
Accommodation/Food: Split stay between city center and Laoshan area to maximize convenience. Try mountain cuisine and seafood.
Souvenirs: Religious items, mountain herbs, Qingdao beer products.
Delve into the diverse facets of Qingdao with a mix of culture, history, nature, and leisure.
Accommodation/Food: Stay near city center or beach area. Enjoy beachside seafood grills and cafes.
Souvenirs: Marine-themed crafts, local seafood products.
Explore more museums, parks, and shopping districts around Qingdao for a full urban and cultural experience.
Accommodation/Food: Central city stay recommended. Try Qingdao’s street food and seafood.
Souvenirs: Local artwork, teas, crafts, night market souvenirs.
Mix Qingdao’s scenic coastlines, parks, cultural sites, and leisure activities.
Accommodation/Food: Stay centrally or near the coast. Explore international and local dining.
Souvenirs: Coastal crafts, sailing souvenirs, seafood products.
Enjoy Qingdao at a relaxed pace, including day trips and revisiting favorite spots.
Accommodation/Food: Stay in the city center. Mix casual and fine dining experiences.
Souvenirs: Regional crafts, Qingdao beer, Penglai local specialties.
This is the only living post office I have ever seen in a museum. It is the most retro of all the living post offices. In addition to selling and mailing normal postcards, the post office can also send slow mail. The postmarks of various historical buildings correspond exactly to the scenery on the back of the postcards. It is a bit complicated to send postcards here. First, pick the postcard code you need and tell the aunt, then take the code paper in her hand to the counter to check out, and take the receipt to the aunt to exchange for the postcard. After writing, go to the counter to buy the corresponding stamps, stick them on and stamp them yourself, walk out of the door and drop them into the mailbox. About one to two weeks later, I received the one sent to me. But why didn't other people give me feedback? I feel uneasy- -
It is a European-style wooden building, with an artistic style that young artists like both inside and outside. Many people take photos here. It is also a very distinctive museum that showcases the development of Qingdao's post and telecommunications over the past century.
There is a slow mail post office on the first floor, and local postcards are sold. The fourth floor is a book bar where you can read and rest, and you can see the internal structure of the wooden tower on the roof. You need to buy a ticket to visit the second floor in the middle. When you go there, the special price is 25 yuan per person.
The exhibits are very rich, with a lot of real objects, information, and pictures, and many of the items are rare and worth seeing. Of course, it would be better if self-guided explanations could be provided~
The Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum mailed things! The attitude is very bad. People with such values should not have a good life. Someone who answered the phone!!! I can't complain at all. The overall building is still okay! I only complain about his way of mailing letters or postcards. It's a complete scam! I sent a letter to a friend on November 17, 2018. So far, on April 30, 2019, more than five months have passed, and my friend hasn't received it! I flipped through the photo album and remembered the letter I wrote, so I searched for the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum phone number on Baidu and called it. Before I finished speaking, the phone was hung up directly, without even a chance to explain! I couldn't get through when I called again!!! I called several times and it was always like this!!! This attitude is completely different from the attitude of writing letters, buying stamps, and mailing letters there before! What a thing, making money and profit!
I don't know if other people received the things they mailed, but anyway, their method is just to defraud tourists. I just want to advise everyone that you can go to the Postal and Telecommunications Museum to visit, but never mail postcards or letters!
Although it didn't cost much to mail something, their attitude is really heartbreaking!
I hope the relevant departments will rectify this! I don’t want tourists to spend any more money in vain!
It is a place worth visiting. The first floor sells postcards and mails, and collects various stamps. The second floor is an exhibition area, showing the development of Qingdao's postal and telecommunications and urban construction. The fourth floor is part of the Liangpin Bookstore.
In fact, the Post and Telecommunications Museum is also a very nice place to take photos. It has a sense of the Republic of China.
Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum is the former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiao'ao. This building was built in 1901 and is the oldest existing post and telecommunications business building in Qingdao. Now there are three floors open: the first floor is the reception hall, antique telephone wall, Jiao'ao 1901 slow delivery, and souvenir shop; the second floor is the main exhibition hall, with the restored Kong Xiangxi office; the fourth floor is the tower 1901 hall, which is the only century-old wooden tower currently open in Qingdao. I don't know what day it is today, and the door says "Free Ticket Today". Since it's free, let's go up and visit.
Ticket price: 50 yuan.
It's called a museum, but it's not really big. It's a bit too simple for a museum. But its surroundings are well done. The second floor is the exhibition hall, and the third floor is a cafe. You can only go up to experience the cafe in the museum if you buy a ticket.
The Post and Telecommunications Museum is near the Zhanqiao scenic area. It is easy to pass by on the way to Zhongshan Road after visiting the Zhanqiao. It is still a European-style building with the characteristics of the old city. The museum itself is free, and the exhibits inside are related to the post and telecommunications in the past. Postcards, stamps, and souvenirs are sold on the first floor, and the second floor and above are exhibition areas. There used to be a cafe on the top floor, but I don’t know if it still exists now. You need to register your ID card information to visit the exhibition, and it takes about half an hour to an hour to visit it. You can send postcards on the first floor and stamp them with special stamps.
Not far from the pier, it is located at the site of the former Jiaoao German Empire Post Office building. The building was built by FH Schmidt Company of Hamburg, Germany in 1900 and completed and put into use in 1901. After the completion of the building, the first floor was used as a post office. In 1905, the German Post Office purchased the property rights of the building and established the Jiaoao German Empire Post Office. For more than 100 years, it has always been a place for postal and telecommunications operations. Now, this century-old post office has been restored and officially opened to the public as a museum. It is the best witness to the century-old city and postal and telecommunications development of Qingdao.
I had no idea about the old post office, but today I learned a lesson about it.
In this era where "one phone in hand allows you to travel the world", the ancestors of these phones can only stay in exhibition halls.
Stamps, postcards, and postmarks, these props that once dominated history, have now gradually faded from people's sight, but they carry many people's once beautiful memories.
Write a letter to your future self. You can do it here.
On a pillar, there is a map of the scenic spot, which is very nice for tourists who are not familiar with the scenic spot.
Tourist souvenirs are also sold here (shopping instructions are at the end of the article), but I won’t post any pictures because it clearly states that taking photos is prohibited.
One of the must-visit "small museums" in Qingdao! ! ! !
The Post and Telecommunications Museum has antique telephones on display and offers a variety of postcards, postmarks and commemorative stamps. It is worth a visit.
The original site was the Jiaoao German Empire Post Office.
There are a lot of items inside, and there is also a leisure place on the top floor where you can read books and drink drinks.
A very old local post office where you can buy postcards and send them to your friends and family. There is also a slow mail service where you can write letters to your future self.
You can go and have a look, you can get stamps (postmarks of various scenic spots in Qingdao), you can mail letters to yourself many years later, the interior is the development history of Qingdao Post Office, it is a small postal and telecommunications history museum, the transmitter, Morse code receiver, radio station, telephone, etc. inside are quite historical. It is a good place for young couples and children to have activities.
Nearby is the Post and Telecommunications Museum, which displays the history of communications in modern China, from the most primitive Morse telegraph, to the disc-dial telephone, to the big brothers of the 1990s, to today's mobile phones.
This is really a great place to take photos. I bought a set of postcards and sent them to a few friends. My colleagues and I stayed here for a whole morning.
It is near the pier. Because the hotel I stayed in was nearby, I passed by it while taking a walk. I didn’t go inside, but the exterior of the building can very well reflect the style of Qingdao.
There is actually nothing special in the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum. The main point is to visit the retro telephones from different periods.
It opens at 9:30 am. It is said that you can send postcards here, at the counter on the first floor, and you can choose to store and specify the date of delivery, which can be postponed for many years.
Such a building under the blue and cloudless sky is like the pure world in a comic book.
There are postcards for sale and can be sent, and there are more than 10 types of stamps here to satisfy the collectors.
There are not many people inside, but there are many exhibits, at least compared with the exhibits in Badaguan.
The first floor of the Post and Telecommunications Museum is free to visit, but you need to buy a ticket to go upstairs. They sell postcards and provide express delivery services. When you enter, you will see two walls displaying various strange communication tools. There is a big table inside, which should be provided for people to write postcards. There is a set of stamps about Qingdao on it! I like it very much.
There is a charge for the second floor and above, so it is not recommended. You can stamp your card here for free, with more than a dozen different stamps, and you can bring a book to stamp your card yourself.
The first floor sells various postcards that can be written and mailed. The second floor is the exhibition hall, where you need to buy a ten-yuan ticket. I don't think the exhibition is very good, unless you are particularly interested in postal and telecommunications.
The most commendable thing is that Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum has preserved a large number of physical objects. For example, telephones made in more than 20 countries in various historical periods, the oldest of which is a wall-mounted wooden telephone produced by Ericsson in 1905. As of 2009, there are less than ten left in the world. Personally, I think that the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum is one of the most worthwhile places to visit in Qingdao in terms of cultural landscape. Now there are three floors open: the first floor is the reception hall, antique telephone wall, Jiaoao 1901 slow delivery, and souvenir shop; the second floor is the main exhibition hall; the fourth floor is the Tower 1901 Hall, which is the only century-old wooden tower currently open in Qingdao. The Gothic structure of the twin towers of the Tower 1901 Hall shows the construction technology 120 years ago. It is an important window to understand architectural art and a witness to modern history. The first floor of the Post and Telecommunications Museum is free to visit, and tickets are required to go upstairs. The first thing that comes into view is a painting that reproduces the scene of the early Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Bureau conducting business; you can understand the market customs and the development of post and telecommunications in Qingdao over the past century through sound, light, electricity, pictures and physical objects.
This museum is the former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao. It was built in 1901 and is the earliest postal and telecommunications business building in Qingdao. The first floor of the Postal and Telecommunications Museum is still a post office where you can send postcards. The second floor is an exhibition hall, the third floor is an office space and cannot be visited, and the fourth floor tower is a coffee bookstore. Most young people who come here, especially girls, should have a special liking for postcards and slow mail services. For me, hearing words such as telegraph and operator and seeing the images of communication calls in those days can arouse my interest more. There is a postal museum in Tianjin. In the era when mail and email were inseparable, the two museums were exactly the same, introducing the historical changes of post and telecommunications in the two places for more than a hundred years. But this one in Qingdao is closer to a colonial history, which "benefited" from Germany and Japan and developed rapidly.
I've heard that there are a lot of commemorative stamps here, and I'm so tired of stamping them.
The commemorative stamps are very unique. They cover many landmarks of Qingdao. Very satisfying. There is a post office opposite the Post and Telecommunications Museum. I helped my friend to cancel the stamps and stamped one for myself. Perfect.
You need to pay a ticket to go to the Post and Telecommunications Museum! There are all kinds of postcards for sale on the first floor. The price is not expensive and they are sold in sets! There are many good-looking ones! !
The exhibits inside mainly focus on the different appearances of telephones in different periods, as well as the development history of postal services in China.
We happened to find the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum. The first floor is free to visit, and tickets are required for the second floor and above, and the price is 30 yuan. I personally think this museum is worth visiting. Interested friends can go and have a look. It is located on Guangxi Road.
The museum has a collection of postcards and telegraph machines from many different periods, many of which I have never seen before and find very interesting. The decoration is very Republican, and walking up the stairs to the fourth floor is Liangyou Bookstore.
You can see real antiques and have afternoon tea on the fourth floor. It's pretty good. Tickets are 25
The museum uses history as a clue to show visitors the development journey of postal and telecommunications over the past century.
The 4th floor of the museum is Liangyou Bookstore, a great place for literary youths.
Full of historical atmosphere. Every frame of the ancient building is worth remembering. It is amazing that the tourist attraction is also a government office.
Listening to the beautiful melody coming from the square, watching the children playing and having fun, and the bubble machine emitting strings of crystal bubbles, it reminded me of Jay Chou's Prague Square. It is the simplest picture, but the most real and beautiful. I can't help but feel a sense of peace and happiness in my heart!
The Red Building is very beautiful. It looks beautiful when photographed from a distance. You need to buy a ticket to enter the post office.
It's an interesting place, and it's free to visit. A postcard costs 3 yuan, and a stamp with a face value of 80 cents costs 1 yuan. You can write a lot of nonsense like the pretentious girl next to you who wrote a pile of postcards; or you can write a sentence like me: "Free signature, don't be deceived"... and then stamp as many commemorative stamps as possible. Put it in the mailbox when you go out (because the annual fee for slow delivery is 20 yuan), walk ten meters to the Liangyou Bookstore next to it to read and take selfies, that's the real place to pretend to be literary and elegant.
The museum itself has the atmosphere of time. The various old telephones, old printers, computers, etc. on display can make people think of the busy situation of the post office at that time.
You can find Qingdao scenery postcards of various styles in the Post and Telecommunications Museum. Scan the code to buy them, and then find the seals of various buildings on the table next to the gate. You can also send or take them away as souvenirs on the postcards.
The mailbox at the entrance is very popular (so I didn't take a photo because there were too many people). I went in and found that I needed to buy a ticket to go upstairs, so I simply walked around the first floor and took a look at the history of communication technology and some old objects. Many people on the first floor were writing letters to themselves ten years later, and then they put stamps on them, stamped them, and threw them into the big mailbox outside. I thought about it but didn't stop writing. I like collecting postcards more, and I'm not very interested in stamp collecting. I don't have much time to play today.
It happened to be open to the public for free that day, and my husband laughed and said there was nothing to see there, he didn't understand anything at all. I have been working in this industry for many years, and looking at these ancient things, I inexplicably wanted to understand their culture and felt an inexplicable sense of familiarity.
There is a pier in front of the museum, which is beautiful. People who work here are really happy.
A small literary place where you can buy business cards and travel notes, suitable for taking photos
A 400-meter walk from the Catholic Church brings you to the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum. This is also a typical German-style building. It is the earliest existing post and telecommunications business department and is currently in operation. It also serves as a post and telecommunications museum to exhibit related history.
【Address】: No. 5 Anhui Road, Qingdao City (200 meters from the trestle, at the intersection of Guangxi Road and Anhui Road)
[Tickets]: Free on the first floor, 50 RMB per person for the historical exhibition hall on the second floor
[Transportation]: Take bus No. 2, No. 5, No. 6, No. 26, No. 202, No. 217, etc. and get off at Zhanqiao Station
It's a small museum, right next to the pier. The building is very artistic, and there are people taking wedding photos at the door. The exhibits are on the second floor, and the directions are not clear enough. It's a bit easy to get lost after getting up there. The exhibits are mainly about the development of postal and telecommunications in Qingdao in various periods, from the German and Japanese rule to the Kuomintang period, etc.
There is no entrance fee to the Post and Telecommunications Museum. It was a great day and we arrived at the Post and Telecommunications Museum early in the morning.
If you want to send postcards, the Post and Telecommunications Museum is a must-visit place! There are countless postmarks, so you can enjoy stamping them! There are also a variety of postcards and souvenirs available for purchase.
The Rushi Bookstore next to the Post and Telecommunications Museum is a high-end bookstore + cafe. If you have time, you can go there and buy a book you like and then get a postmark and seal from the Post and Telecommunications Museum as a souvenir.
Due to time constraints, I only took a walk outside, but the unique architectural style is indeed very attractive. Next time I have time, I will go in and learn more about Qingdao's market customs and the development of postal and telecommunications over the past century.
Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum is located near the pier. It is a European-style building with a red exterior. It is the earliest existing post and telecommunications business building in Qingdao.
The exhibition hall is small, with many retro telephones, and you can send postcards and write letters to yourself in a few years. Now think about it, mobile communications are becoming more and more convenient for our lives, but we have gradually forgotten the feeling of waiting for important people to write letters.
The former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao is the only century-old wooden tower currently open to the public in Qingdao. It is a place where you can send slow mail and write postcards to your future self.
I found the Post and Telecommunications Museum while strolling around. It is open to the public free of charge. There is also a Liangyou Bookstore next to the Post and Telecommunications Museum, which is perfect for reading and having afternoon tea.
The former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao is the only century-old wooden tower currently open to the public in Qingdao. It is very close to the beach and it is nice to come here to feel the literary and artistic atmosphere after strolling around the beach.
2017.11.20 This is a loss. I took a bus and walked to the museum according to the map on Daxue Road. I found that the museum is near the pier, very close, so I came back. The first floor sells postcards and stamps. I really regret not mailing a few. I am too lazy to write. The rest is an introduction to Qingdao's postal history and some ancient facilities. Together with the Post and Telecommunications Museum is a bookstore called Liangyou Bookstore. It is really a great place for literary young people to take photos. I really like it. There are several such bookstores in Qingdao, all worth a stroll.
If possible, three people can really stay here for a whole day. Pick postcards, draw postcards, the first floor of the Post and Telecommunications Museum sells and mails postcards, the second floor is a museum that displays the history of postal and telecommunications, and the third floor is a library + cafe where you can flip through books, pose, and relax~~~
This is the former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao, which showcases the development of Qingdao's postal and telecommunications industry since the colonial period.
There is an entrance fee, which seems to be 10 yuan. It is located at the junction of Anhui Road and Guangxi Road. The second floor is like a small exhibition hall, with many old telegraph machines, telephones, etc. There is a bookstore on the top floor.
Near the trestle is the Post and Telecommunications Museum. When I went there, it had just opened and there were only five or six people inside. Parents with children can go and learn about it. It is quite good. I suggest that friends who buy postcards can consider this place, because there are really many styles, each with its own characteristics. The Changsha sausage nearby is really delicious.
I walked here by accident. I didn't know it was a museum at first. This attraction was not included in the itinerary. I took a photo of it while strolling. It's a beautiful building. It's close to the sea. I think Qingdao is suitable for wearing a pair of sports shoes, but not along the coast. There are many attractions along the way. Such encounters should happen during travel.
Located on Anhui Road, South District, Qingdao, it is a typical German building. It was originally a German post office and is also the oldest post office in Qingdao. There are postcards on the first floor, slow delivery services are provided, and there are various telephones. The first floor is free and worth a visit. There is also a Liangyou Bookstore next to it, which is also worth a visit.
Nowadays, many scenic spots have slow delivery services, where you can send postcards to your future self. In fact, this place also has such a function. Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum is a European-style building with a red exterior wall. It is the earliest existing post and telecommunications business building in Qingdao. Here you can visit various interesting old-fashioned telephones, drink a cup of coffee, and write a postcard to yourself. It is very suitable for literary young people.
If you are interested in stamps and postcards, it is definitely worth a visit. If you just want to take a quick look, there is no need to plan to come here. If you come here, you can also visit the Liangyou Bookstore next door.
Centennial Footprints Light and Shadow Space
The only century-old wooden tower open to the public in Qingdao, the former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao, was built in 1901 and is the earliest existing postal and telecommunications business building in Qingdao. The entire building is arranged along the street and is built with red bricks. It has a Gothic brick-wood structure with distinctive spires, arches and stained glass windows, creating the most beautiful light and shadow space.
In November 2010, it was officially opened to the public after investment and renovation. There are about 1,000 cultural relics and exhibits in the museum, and more than 2,000 historical photos. The Post and Telecommunications Museum has three floors open: the reception hall, antique telephone wall, Jiaoao 1901 slow delivery, souvenir shop on the first floor, the main exhibition hall on the second floor; and the 1901 Hall in the tower on the fourth floor.
The Post and Telecommunications Museum covers an area of 2,500 square meters, with 1,400 square meters of display area. Browse the history and cultural relics of the Post and Telecommunications Museum, and enjoy the exquisite stamps and postcards. You can take a rest in the rooftop cafe or send a postcard with a commemorative stamp. It is also one of the outdoor shooting locations for the wedding dress.
What if time could slow down? Why not stop and sit in the quiet corner of Jiaoao 1901 Slow Delivery and send love to your future self or to someone you care about. Imagine the time it takes to send it, one year, two years, or even longer.
Inside the museum, the first to third floors, except for the stairwell, are all illuminated by double-layer transparent glass windows. The sunlight from the tower shines through the charming colored glass windows, casting colorful light and shadows on the walls and floors; outside the museum, the shadows of the trees and the undulating facades under the light intersect to produce mottled and colorful projections. It is magnificent!
Precious exhibits, classic architecture, nostalgic style, worth a visit
It is the former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao. This building was built in 1901 and is the earliest existing postal and telecommunications business building in Qingdao. You can also buy a few postcards inside as a souvenir.
The Post and Telecommunications Museum, built in 1901, is the only century-old wooden tower currently open to the public in Qingdao. The first floor is free and has some old-fashioned telephones from various eras. Tickets for the second floor and above are 30 yuan. It is free from October 8 to June of the following year.
The Post and Telecommunications Museum is next to Liangyou Bookstore. On the first floor, you can buy celebrity photos and souvenirs. There is a big table for writing. There is a mailbox and stamps at the door. You can mail them by yourself. The museum is upstairs. You need to buy a ticket to go upstairs. The third floor is connected to Liangyou Bookstore. I majored in communication engineering in college. When I came here, I couldn't help but feel a lot of emotions. In my childhood, I also experienced the process of fixed-line phones from no display to display screen, simultaneous answering to cordless phones and then to mobile phones. Have these changes become rote memorization for the post-00s? You can remember clearly what you have experienced without memorizing it, but unfortunately the pace of social development is not up to you... I know that the telephone appeared very early, and I think the old-fashioned telephone is very interesting, but this church-style wall-mounted machine still makes me take a picture of it as a souvenir. There is not only the development of telephones, but also communication-related equipment such as wireless devices.
Walking in the wind, the sun is suddenly so gentle today...Hey, what is that! So beautiful!
Now the property belongs to China Unicom Qingdao Branch. There are souvenirs and express delivery on the first floor. I bought a boat model. There is a fee of 30 yuan to visit the second floor.
Not far from the pier, it's an old building in Qingdao. It's not big inside, so you can stop by to take a look.
It's very artistic, everyone is quietly writing postcards.
You can send postcards here, and there are also various stamps with iconic buildings. They also provide a slow delivery service, so you can send a letter to yourself three years later.
Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum is not far from the trestle bridge. It is an old building built in 1901 and was once the site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao. The lobby on the first floor of the museum restores the scene of the old post office in the early 20th century; the second floor is a historical object and information exhibition hall, which shows the urban changes of Qingdao over the past 100 years and the development of the communications industry. The attic on the top floor is a cafe.
A good place to learn about history, sell postcards and help mail them
The first floor sells postcards and other small boutiques. The second to fourth floors are for visiting, which is free. There are many old telephones, telegraphs, radios and other equipment. Downstairs there are stamps of various Qingdao attractions. You can stamp various stamps on the postcards you write. There is a mailbox outside the door, which is very convenient for sending postcards. There is an art exhibition and a cafe on the fourth floor. The atmosphere is good and you can take a rest.
#Go out and travel#Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum, the exhibitions inside are very good, especially the discovery of radio stations and communications!
Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum is located at No. 5 Anhui Road, Shinan District, at the junction of Anhui Road and Guangxi Road. It is the former site of the German Empire Post Office in Jiaoao. This building was built in 1901 and is the earliest existing post and telecommunications business building in Qingdao. In 2009, China Unicom Qingdao Branch invested nearly 10 million yuan to build the Qingdao Post and Telecommunications Museum, which was officially opened to the public on November 21, 2010. The museum has more than 1,000 cultural relics and exhibits, more than 2,000 historical photos, and is regularly open to primary and secondary school students in Qingdao for free.
Take bus No. 220 from the Christian Church to Zhanqiao Station. You can see the Post and Telecommunications Museum after getting off the bus. It is quite convenient to visit by bus. The Post and Telecommunications Museum is also a German-style building. The first floor is open to the public for free and you can send postcards. Tickets are required for the second and third floors, which I personally think are very interesting. There is a cafe on the fourth floor, but we didn't go there.
Next to the [Liangyou Bookstore] near the pier is the [Post and Telecommunications Museum], which is in the same building. It is an old German-style building and the former site of the German Empire Post Office. The ticket is 25 yuan per ticket, which is still worth a visit. (Later I found that you can go directly down to the museum from the fourth floor of Liangyou Bookstore, but it is not easy to operate a museum, so 25 yuan is considered a contribution.)
The museum is not well-known and seems very deserted. Looking at the history of postal service, we can understand that in the past, the carriages were very slow, and the letters were also very slow. A letter traveled across mountains and rivers to bring longing, and seeing the words is like seeing the person, which is what it means.
There is a place to write postcards at the entrance of the museum. There are stamps of various scenic spots in Qingdao. After reading the old letters, you can write a few words to your friends. (Don't miss this museum if you have visited various places to get stamps.)