Museum för det välbevarade örlogsskeppet Vasa från 1600-talet som sjönk på sin jungfruresa 1628.
Grottan i Hagalund — Unnamed Road
Unnamed Road, 169 70 Solna, Sverige
Kontakt
Öppettider
Om Grottan
Grottan ligger i Hagalund, Solna. Betyget är 3.9 av 5, baserat på 7 omdömen.
Vanliga frågor om Grottan
Var ligger Grottan?
Grottan finns i Hagalund, Solna. Adressen är Unnamed Road, 169 70 Solna, Sverige.
Vad har Grottan för betyg?
Grottan har betyget 3.9 av 5 på Google, baserat på 7 omdömen.
Vilka är öppettiderna för Grottan?
Öppettiderna för Grottan: måndag: Öppet dygnet runt. tisdag: Öppet dygnet runt. onsdag: Öppet dygnet runt. torsdag: Öppet dygnet runt. fredag: Öppet dygnet runt. lördag: Öppet dygnet runt. söndag: Öppet dygnet runt.
Finns det fler historiska landmärken i Hagalund?
Ja, du kan hitta fler historiska landmärken och liknande verksamheter i Hagalund genom att söka i vår katalog.
Recensioner från Google
Fint men lite nedskräpat
The Grotto in Hagaparken is not a natural cave, but rather the entrance to a tunnel carved into the rock. This tunnel was part of an unrealized water system project, intended to supply water to a planned royal stable. The system was to use a pump and a water reservoir at the top of the hill, and potentially create a waterfall (cascade) visible from King Gustav III's pavilion. Work on the tunnel began in 1786, but the project was never completed, and the water level in the nearby Brunnsviken bay dropped in 1863, cutting off the tunnel from the water. Currently, only rainwater is found in the Grotto. The Grotto is part of the historic Haga Park, managed by the Swedish National Property Board.
Incomplete cave from the 1780s that was supposed to bring water for the horses that would have been living on the viewpoint, on top of the rocks, and there is also the horizontal tunnel that would have brought water from the lake. When coming to the cave you'd feel a very, very cold breeze and strong smell of underground humidity. If it would have been completed as King Gustav III had imagined, today this would have been quite different place than it is now.
A small "cave" which was supposed to bring water to the nearby stables in the eighteenth century