
Philips Museum
In Eindhoven, Netherlands .
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Discover more attractions and things to do in Eindhoven.

DAF Museum
Close to the canal curve, an old brick complex shelters stories of engines, artisans, and a city that built vehicles for roads far beyond Brabant. The museum traces the company founded in 1928 by engineer Hub van Doorne , from trailers and lathes to streamlined trucks and city cars. Halls move through the 20th century with prototypes, race machines, and assembly-line tools arranged like a working orchestra. Panels address production during World War II and the hard choices faced by factories under occupation, then the boom years that followed, and 21st century restorations that keep the story running. Families linger at cutaway gearboxes and see how torque becomes motion, while retirees point out models they once drove. In a reconstructed street, neon signs and shopfronts set the vehicles back into everyday life, reminding visitors that innovation ends at someone's doorstep. Step outside and you can almost hear a diesel note rolling down the quay.

Evoluon
Across a sweep of grass, a gleaming saucer rises as if it had taxied in from the future and decided to stay. Opened in 1966 under design director Louis Kalff , the Evoluon fused exhibition hall and icon to celebrate technology's promises in the optimistic postwar era. Its disc spans about 77 meters , lifted by tapered columns that make the mass appear to float, a bravura gesture of Modernist engineering in the late 20th century . Inside, changing programs play with light, sound, and interaction, returning to the building's roots in hands-on science. School groups test ideas at consoles while conferences turn the ring of galleries into a commons for invention. Walk the perimeter at dusk and the halo glows over lawns where families linger; look up from the pond and the saucer seems airborne again. Evoluon remains a local shorthand for daring, a reminder that form can persuade us to imagine tomorrow.

Strijp-S District
Former factories and power stations now frame a lively grid of studios, cafes, and lofts where the air still smells faintly of oil and coffee. Much of this quarter grew in the 20th century as a closed industrial campus under leaders like Anton Philips ; today Strijp-S opens those volumes to residents and visitors with care. The vast Klokgebouw, completed in 1928 , anchors the ensemble with its clock face and rugged concrete bays. In autumn, the city's showcase of creativity— Dutch Design Week —arrives, drawing makers and curious crowds since 2002 . Courtyards host prototypes and debates while rooftops become viewing platforms for workshops below. Even on quiet weekdays, you'll see cyclists gliding between studios and kids playing under brick arcades, proof that reinvention can feel ordinary. By night, light installations stitch the blocks together, and the district hums like the factory it once was—only now the product is ideas.

Van Abbemuseum
Set beside the Dommel and the city's gentle quays, the Van Abbemuseum feels like a conversation between river light and bold ideas. Founded in 1936 with the gift of cigar magnate Henri van Abbe , it became a pioneer in collecting and exhibiting art that challenged habits of looking. Galleries trace the 20th century from avant-garde experiments to social questions, placing familiar names alongside provocations that still feel new. Works by Pablo Picasso converse with radical geometry by El Lissitzky , while temporary shows link Eindhoven's design culture to global movements. Architecture opens to the water, so reflections drift across concrete and glass. On quiet afternoons you may hear a guide explaining how artists responded to war, cities, and technology, and why that history matters in a town built on invention. The museum's library and cafe extend the visit into an easy study session; step back outside and the river carries the conversation on.