At the Santos Coffee Museum visitors experience the world’s favorite caffeinated-beverage through history and of course, taste. The Coffee Museum is housed in what used to be the Coffee Stock Exchange, where Brazilian coffee was weighed and traded before being sent through the Santos Port and overseas.
The Coffee Stock Exchange closed in the 1960s and fell into disrepair, but after decades of restoration efforts, in 2005 the beautiful colonial building re-opened as the Coffee Museum. The building’s architecture is a highlight of a visit to the museum. High ceilings with stained-glass skylights lie above ornately designed marble floors on the Exchange’s main trading room. The museum’s exhibition rooms explain the historical and cultural significance of coffee in Brazil, and worldwide, through photos, paintings, antique coffee-farming tools and more.
Brazil has a strong coffee culture – not only is Brazil the largest coffee producer in the world, but it is also is the second largest consumer of coffee. This is easy to see in every day life throughout the country, where a cafezinho (a little coffee), is customary in the mornings, after meals, and practically any time you want a pick-me-up. After touring the museum, be sure to try a cup of delicious Brazilian-grown coffee in the museum café for yourself!
Practical Info
This Coffee Museum is located at Rua XV de November, 95 in the historic center of Santos. It is open Tuesday-Sunday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The museum is also open on Mondays, November through March. Admission is R$6 for adults and R$3 for children and seniors over 60. Admission is free on Saturday.
Address: Rua XV de November, 95 – Centro Histórico, Santos 11010-151, Brazil
Hours: Tuesday-Sunday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Open on Mondays November – March.
Admission: R$6 for adults, R$3 for children and seniors over 60. Free on Saturdays.