The binary legacy of the Acropolis Museum

The Acropolis Museum before and after. Since its launch in June 2009, it has come to rank as the 30th most popular museum in the world, according to The Art Newspaper, and received around 19.3 million visitors between then and 2023. [AMNA]

June 20, 2009 seems like a good starting point to be searching for the "ground zero" of the tourism boom in the central Athens neighborhood of Koukaki. But is it the only one? The inauguration of the (new) Acropolis Museum 15 years ago disrupted the pendulum of the capital's attractions, which until then swung somewhat monotonously and predictably between the always popular monuments of the Sacred Rock and the struggling - in terms of visitor numbers - National Archaeological Museum quite some distance away.

Suddenly, the main pole of tourist interest, also aided by the so-called unification of archaeological sites, which provided residents and visitors with an unprecedentedly extensive and beautiful walkway below the Acropolis, took off. The new, monothematic museum, designed by the internationally renowned French-Swiss architect Bernard Tschumi, attracted about 10,000...

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