Practical info
Opening hours
Open Tuesday – Sunday. Closed every Monday, on January 1st, December 24th, 25th, and 31st.
Tuesday to Friday inclusive, 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (ticket office closes at 5 p.m.).
Saturday and Sunday, 10:30 am to 6:00 pm (ticket office closes at 5:30 pm).
The Museum will also be closed on December 24 and 31.
Please note:
No pets allowed (except assistance dogs).
For the good preservation of the works, flash photography is forbidden.
We accept the local currency, the Talent.
We have secure individual lockers for your personal belongings.
Average visiting time: 1hr30mins
Routes and maps
Address
Hergé Museum
Rue du Labrador, 26 – B-1348 Louvain-la-Neuve
Tel: +32 (0)10 488 421
Location
Getting here
By car
GPS coordinates at entrance: 50° 40′ 16.42 “N – 4° 36′ 45.28” E – Altitude 119m.
Recommended parking: “Grand Place”, under the pedestrian precinct. Park in the red zone.
Disabled parking:
contact us info@museeherge.be or +32 10 48 84 13
Refer to Boulevard du Nord (the street’s former name) instead of Rue du Labrador if the street is not yet listed in your GPS.
By train (the Museum is a 3-minute walk from the station)
Timetable on the SNCB website (choose destination Louvain-la-Neuve).
Download our brochure (pdf) on transport and accommodation.
Museum map
Immediate boarding for a tour that begins on the upper floor of the museum.
The elevator takes you to level 3.
It’s the start of a fabulous journey that takes you through four rooms to discover a major work in the history of comic strip art. Then, via a subtle interplay of walkways and staircases, you’ll reach the other four rooms, presenting all the facets of a great artistic adventure.
Enjoy your visit!
Room 1: A life’s journey
22 frames? and four display cases summarise the life of an artist committed to a monumental body of work of astonishing variety. A detour through the passions of a man who led his quiet revolution in the land of vignettes and speech bubbles.
Room 2: Multiple creations
Hergé was much more than a comic-strip artist. He happily tamed many genres in a style that was uniquely his own. Today, he leaves us a surprisingly diverse graphic legacy. Discover an artist in his own right…
Room 3: A paper family
Key characters in The Adventures of Tintin. Appearance, origin(s), character traits, physical appearance and special features of each of them, with insightful commentary by their creator.
Room 4: Cinema
To write his stories, Hergé often drew inspiration from current events of the day. As for the staging of his stories, it owes much to the principles of the Seventh Art. Focus on a few outstanding examples of this dual influence.
Room 5: The laboratory
Hergé’s work also has a scientific dimension. Deep and recurrent, it sometimes appears wise and rational, in its most Cartesian form, while at other times it dons the troubled garb of the paranormal, in the great tradition of the marvellous novel. Science and fiction go hand in hand, and when humor and daring get involved, it’s a real treat!
Room 6: Travel dreams
An invitation to travel, a visa for a world without borders, at the gateway to knowledge and great civilisations. Hergé takes us on a journey through his “Museum of the imagination”, never far from the human element, respecting the peoples and continents he encounters.
Room 7: Studios Hergé
21 years old… For 21 years, Hergé was a one-man band. Almost alone at the helm, piloting a very heavily laden boat. But single-handed sailing eventually wore the artist out. The creation of Studios Hergé was the solution, a solution that transformed the artist into a business leader.
Room 8: The glory of Hergé
On March 3rd, 1983, Georges Remi, alias Hergé, passed away. The media in many countries were gripped by the blues, and several generations of Tintin readers suddenly had the impression that something had gone wrong in the realm of vignettes and speech bubbles. But as history has taught us, great artists never die…
Visiting aids
Audio Guide app
To discover and learn more about the Hergé Museum’s permanent collection, download the free Hergé Museum audio guide app.
Simply open the app and select the desired language.
Content is unlocked at the Museum by scanning a QR Code.
If you don’t have a smartphone, you can always use the audioguide provided free of charge by the Museum (except on the first Sunday of each month, when no audioguide is available).
Instructions in 3 steps
Download the audio guide application on the App Store or Google Play.
Open the application and download the content in the desired language.
You can unlock the content at the Museum by scanning a QR Code.
Don’t forget to charge your device’s battery and bring your headphones with you.
Quizzes
Catalogue
Individuals and families
Entrance fees
Adult | €12 |
Large families, students (and children aged 15 to 18) and seniors (65 years old) | €7 |
Children aged 7 to 14 | €5 |
Children under 7 | Free |
Students at UCLouvain and Université Saint-Louis | €5 |
Teachers’ card | €5 |
Article 27 | €1.25 |
People with disabilities | Free |
First Sunday of the month | Free |
Museum Pass Musées holders | Free |
Blindfold” guided tour per person (child or adult, by reservation 2 weeks in advance only) To find out more about this visit, go to Disabled visitors |
€14 |
Discounts apply on presentation of proof of entitlement.
Groups
Self-guided tour (reservation required 4 days in advance – minimum 15 people)
Ticket price per person :
Adult | €9 |
Seniors | €7 |
Students over 18 | €9 |
Students at UCLouvain and Saint-Louis University | €5 |
Children aged 7 to 18 | €5 |
1h30 guided tour (booking required 2 weeks in advance)
Guide package for groups of 10 to 25 people | €125 |
Combined Hergé/Folon visit (booking required 2 weeks in advance)
The Musée Hergé and the Fondation Folon (La Hulpe) offer a discovery day for groups to visit their respective institutions.
For groups of 10 to 25 people: | |
2-museum ticket (per person) | €14 |
Guide package (per museum) | €125 |
Blindfold” guided tour per person (child or adult, by reservation only 2 weeks in advance)
Guide package for groups of 10 to 25 people To find out more about this visit, go to Disabled visitors |
€14 |
Information and reservations
For schools
Self-guided tour prepared by the teacher (reservation required 4 days in advance)
Ticket price per person :
Children under 18 (for groups of 15 or more) 1 accompanying adult free for every 10 paying children |
€5 |
Self-guided tour with educational suitcase (reservation required 4 days in advance)
Ticket price per person :
Children under 18 (for groups of 15 or more) 1 accompanying adult free for every 10 paying children |
€5 |
Educational kits are available for teachers wishing to introduce their pupils to the Hergé Museum in a fun and interactive way. These cases are suitable for the 3 primary cycles. They must be booked at least 2 weeks in advance, subject to availability.
1h30 combined tour (booking required 2 weeks in advance)
Guide package for groups of 15 to 25 people | €125 |
Information and reservations
People with disabilities
Committed to making culture accessible to everyone, the Hergé Museum offers a range of facilities and activities to cater for every visitor.
Individual
Free admission for disabled visitors.
Group
Free admission for disabled visitors.
Two accompanying adults (per 10 people) receive the same free admission.
Guided tour lasting about 1 hour. Reservations required 2 weeks in advance.
– Visually impaired (groups of 2 to 15) | €75 |
Awareness campaign on visual impairment (only by reservation 2 weeks in advance)
A guide takes you on a sensory journey to discover the world of Hergé.
Deprived of sight, visitors are invited to touch, feel…imagine the Hergé Museum.
The “blindfolded” tour lasts approximatetely 45 minutes, followed by a 30 minute self-guided tour to allow visitors to compare the visualisation with the reality of the Hergé Museum.
This guided tour costs €14 per person (child or adult).
Book 2 weeks in advance.
For PMR (reduced mobility) parking
Contact the information and booking department.
Information and reservations
Exclusives
on the first Sunday of the month
Free admission
Event of the month
Every first Sunday of each month, the Hergé Museum opens its doors to the public free of charge. An opportunity to (re)discover, with family or friends, the fabulous career of one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century.