What to see & do
Museums are usually open Tuesdays-Sundays and entry fees range from SEK 60 to 190. Some of them offer free entry at certain times for example, go to Moderna on Fridays at 6pm or Nobel Museum on Tuesdays at 5pm if you&rsquore on a tight budget. Djurgården Island, where the ABBA Museum is located, is a beautiful large park area where you find many famous sights such as the Vasa Ship, an ancient battleship that was salvaged in the 1960s, the Junibacken Museum devoted to the children&rsquos stories by Astrid Lindgren, Skansen Open Air Museum that also hosts a zoo, the Gröna Lund Amusement Park, and art galleries such as Waldemarsudde (former home of an arty prince who built a sculpture park), Liljevalchs and Thielska. Museum of Architecture (arkitekturmuseet.se) is located on Skeppsholmen Island and it also deals with Swedish design. Bonniers Konsthall (bonnierskonsthall.se) is a small museum for contemporary art in Torsgatan 19, another more happening place is Färgfabriken(fargfabriken.se) in Liljeholmen just outside the centre of town. Museum of Photography (fotografiska.eu) is trendy and located in an old shed in the harbour, Stadsgårdshamnen, and is about to start branches in other parts of the world &mdash such as Shanghai in China. Strindberg Museum (strindbergmuseet.se) in Drottninggatan 85 is a must-see for book lovers, located in the apartment that once belonged to Sweden&rsquos most famous novelist August Strindberg (1849-1912). The 'Millennium Walk' (SEK 130) in English starts at 11.30am on most Saturdays, more frequently in summertime buy your ticket at the City Museum, Slussen. There are also guided walks dedicated to ABBA, Murders, Food, Sex, Ghosts, and other interest areas. For more, see visitstockholm.com.