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Locations close to Știrbei Palace in Buftea

  • Museums & Galleries

    Nicodim Gallery

    Nicodim Gallery, opened in 2014 by Mihai Nicodim, is a landmark for contemporary art in Bucharest. Located at 29 Băiculești Street, in Sector 1, the gallery offers an intimate and versatile space, ideal for installations, painting, and experimental projects. From the very beginning, Nicodim has promoted influential Romanian artists such as Adrian G...

  • Museums & Galleries

    Combinatul Fondului Plastic

    Built between 1966 and 1972 by the Romanian Union of Visual Artists, the Combinatul Fondului Plastic was originally conceived as a multifunctional industrial complex for artistic production. Located at 29 Băiculești Street, in Sector 1, the site has evolved into one of Bucharest’s most dynamic contemporary creative hubs.
    Initially home to the produ...

  • Museums & Galleries

    Sandwich Gallery

    Sandwich Gallery is a collective-run art space founded in 2017, transforming a narrow in-between area (roughly 11 square meters) tucked between two utility buildings into a vibrant incubator for site-specific and experimental installations. Located at 13 Pechea Street in Sector 1, the gallery's unconventional dimensions—about 1.5 meters by 8 meters...

  • Museums & Galleries

    Dimitrie Guști National Village Museum

    The Dimitrie Gusti National Village Museum, the second largest open-air ethnographic museum in the world after the one in Stockholm, is a fascinating place where you can get to know your past, your history, your roots. It is the mirror of Romanian country life, the museum celebrating Romanian traditions and culture.

    Inaugurated in 1936 by the soc...

  • Museums & Galleries

    Spring Palace (Ceaușescu House)

    The Spring Palace, also known as the Ceaușescu House, is, as the name suggests, the former private residence of Nicolae and Elena Ceaușescu. Located in Bucharest, this palace offers a fascinating glimpse into the luxurious life of the former dictator and his family, and is one of the most impressive examples of architecture and history from Romania...

  • Museums & Galleries

    The Zambaccian Museum

    The Zambaccian Museum is one of those places Bucharest keeps quietly to itself, far from the busier tourist trails. Tucked into a calm corner of the Dorobanți neighborhood, it makes no grand announcement from the outside — and that's precisely what amplifies the effect once you step in.
    The house was built specifically in the 1940s to hold the coll...

  • Museums & Galleries

    The National Aviation Museum

    Romania has a longer and more serious relationship with aviation than most people remember. Traian Vuia completed the first fully mechanical flight in 1906. Aurel Vlaicu built his own aircraft in the workshops of a Bucharest school. Henri Coandă worked on the world's first jet-powered plane. All three did this at an age when others were barely fini...

  • Museums & Galleries

    The CFR Museum in Bucharest

    On Calea Griviței nr. 193B, in the inner courtyard of a railway administrative complex immediately adjacent to Gara de Nord, sits one of the oldest technical museums in Bucharest. The CFR Museum does not impress through scale and makes no attempt to — it impresses through the density of a heritage built over more than eight decades, bringing togeth...

  • Museums & Galleries

    The Perfume Museum

    Inside the Beautik perfumery on Calea Dorobanților, there is a corner of Bucharest that few people know about and even fewer forget after seeing it. The Perfume Museum impresses differently than you might expect — through density, through stories, through the weight of time concentrated in a few dozen square metres. Over 3,000 perfume bottles, each...

  • Museums & Galleries

    The Victor Babeș Memorial Museum

    Victor Babeș died in 1926, yet the Institute of Bacteriology he founded in Bucharest still bears his name today, as does the genus of parasites he discovered — Babesia — present in every microbiology textbook in the world. The world's first bacteriology treatise, written by him in 1885 alongside the French scientist Victor André Cornil, is on displ...

FAQ in case you need it

  • Yes, it is generally safe, with occasional petty theft in busy areas. Use common sense precautions.
  • No, but it helps. Many people speak English, especially younger generations and
    professionals.
  • Metro is fastest, public transport is cheap, and ride-sharing (Uber/Bolt) is convenient.
    Walking works great in the city center.
  • Yes. EU citizens can buy freely. Non-EU citizens can buy apartments and rent easily.
  • Bucharest is affordable compared to most EU capitals. Rent, food, and transport are
    reasonably priced. Costs depend on lifestyle.
  • Non-EU citizens need a visa or residence permit. EU citizens must register after 3 months
    with Romanian Immigration.
  • Yes. Public healthcare is accessible, but private clinics offer faster and higher-quality
    services. Health insurance is recommended.
  • Yes. Bucharest has several international schools and English-taught university programs,
    especially in medicine, business, and tech.