Tucked away on Strada Henri Coandă nr. 26, in Sector 1, the George Severeanu Museum is one of Bucharest's most discreet and fascinating museums. Housed in an elegant eclectic building dating back to around 1860 — with oval windows, decorative garlands and neo-baroque influences — the museum was once the residence of radiologist George Severeanu, the first director of the Bucharest City Museum and one of the most passionate collectors of antiquities in interwar Romania.
Severeanu travelled throughout his life — across Romania, Bulgaria, Italy and Greece — patiently gathering remarkable artefacts: ancient Greek vessels, clay figurines, bronzes and marble, Roman glassware, gems and cameos, and prehistoric ceramics belonging to the Cucuteni, Vădastra, Wietenberg and Boian cultures. His greatest passion, however, was numismatics: his collection of approximately 9,000 coins — ranging from Geto-Dacian and Greek issues to medieval coins of the Romanian Principalities — is considered one of the most valuable in Romania.
In 1939, before his untimely death, Severeanu donated his entire collection to Bucharest City Hall. The house opened as a museum in 1956, closed in the 1990s due to deterioration, was restored and reopened in November 2017 — after more than 25 years of absence.
Today, visitors can explore both the archaeological and numismatic collections and the doctor's original study, complete with his custom-ordered furniture, personal library and photographs of the era. A place where time stands still.
Wednesday – Sunday, 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM (last entry at 5:30 PM).