What is this place

The Patek Philippe Museum in Geneva is a dedicated horology museum in Plainpalais on Rue des Vieux-Grenadiers. Its displays span European timekeeping from the 16th century to today and the history of Patek Philippe.

Key features

  • Opened in 2001 in a restored early-20th-century watchmaking building – an industrial shell adapted for a museum.
  • Two permanent strands – the Antique Collection (European watches, enamels, automata, 16th–19th c.) and the Patek Philippe Collection (since 1839) – neatly split eras.
  • Horological library – rare treatises, catalogues and albums on enamel and miniature painting – a research backbone.
  • Public guided tours on weekend afternoons – a concise curator-led overview of the key rooms.
  • No photography inside – conservation and IP for decorative surfaces take priority.

What to see

  • Patek Philippe pocket and wristwatches from early chronographs to 20th-century grand complications.
  • Automata, musical snuffboxes, Blois enamels and Geneva miniatures from the 17th–19th centuries.
  • Rotating themed showcases on enamelling techniques and case design.

History

The museum was initiated by Philippe Stern, Patek Philippe’s president, and opened to the public in 2001 after adapting the building. The narrative follows the firm from 1839 and European watchmaking since the 16th century.

Subsequent acquisitions and multi-volume catalogues cemented the museum’s status as a reference centre for Geneva and European decorative horology.

Practical information

Location: Rue des Vieux-Grenadiers 7, 1205 Geneva, Plainpalais, near MAMCO and MEG.

Getting there: From Cornavin, trams 12, 18 to Plainpalais or 15 to Cirque – 5–8 minutes on foot; buses 1, 32 to Musée Patek Philippe.

Access: Ticketed entry; cloakroom and lockers; lift between floors. No photography or flash allowed inside.

Visiting hours: Tue–Fri typically 14:00–18:00, Sat 10:00–18:00; Sun–Mon closed; holiday hours vary.

Visit duration: 60–90 minutes self-guided; up to 2 hours with a tour and library stop.

Best time: Saturday morning for a quieter visit; on weekdays, arrive at opening time.

Notes: Public tours at fixed afternoon times; group bookings on request. Photography prohibited; large bags to lockers.