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The most beautiful new museums in the world named in the prestigious Prix Versailles awards – including a unique cultural centre just an £18 flight away

Seven museums have been named among the most beautiful in the world at a prestigious awards ceremony.  

The Prix Versailles awards assesses hotels, restaurants, airports, museums and campuses on their architecture and design, and launched its latest edition at the start of the month.

For the World Architecture and Design Award, the body spotlighted seven newly designed or renovated cultural museums from around the globe that seamlessly blend architecture with storytelling. 

Awe-inspiring landmarks in East and Central Asia dominated the list, with just one US and one European museum on the list. 

A unique cultural centre in Lithuania, designed to honour a destroyed Holocaust village, was Europe’s shining star – and the Baltic country costs from just £18 to visit from the UK. 

Read on to discover the most beautiful museums to add to your global bucket list. 

1. Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates 

The Zayed National Museum in Abu Dhabi is characterised by its five striking towers designed to resemble falcon wings 

Opened in December 2025 on Abu Dhabi’s Saadiyat Island, the Zayed National Museum is a premier cultural landmark that documents the country’s rich history, heritage, and the life of its founder, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan. 

Designed by Foster + Partners, the striking museum is defined by five, 123-metre-high towers shaped like falcon wings, as detailed on its website. 

Falcons are seen as a national symbol of strength and courage in Abu Dhabi, with falconry historically essential to Bedouin survival and now considered a prized traditional sport. 

What makes this design truly unique is its sustainability; the wings function as thermal chimneys, drawing cool air into the building to lower energy consumption. 

Set within an 89,000-square-metre site, the main exhibition spaces are housed in an eco-friendly mound embedded into the ground for natural insulation, surrounded by a 600-metre landscaped garden featuring 900 species of native plants and trees. 

The museum is home to over 1,500 artefacts displayed in six permanent galleries, covering hundreds of thousands of years of history from ancient times to modern day – including a 300,000 stone tool discovered at Jebel Hafit, the nation’s highest mountain.

Using an ‘authentic’ form of storytelling, each object in the museum links the past with people’s living traditions today. 

2. Science & Technology Museum, Shenzhen, China 

The Science & Technology Museum in Shenzhen, China, features a futuristic, pebble-shaped design 

The Science & Technology Museum, opened in Shenzhen’s Guangming Science City district in May 2025, focuses on robotics, space exploration and digital civilisation through interactive, AI-powered exhibits. 

Designed by Zaha Hadid architects, the museum is distinguished by its futuristic, pebble-shaped design, wrapped in more than 90,000 stainless steel panels that create a gradient that shifts from blue to grey.

Inside, a 33-metre-high central atrium connects six floors of flexible exhibition spaces designed to make navigation easy for visitors, as reported by Design Bloom.

Sustainability is also central to the design, with solar panels, passive cooling systems, and energy-efficient ventilation that helps the museum achieve green building standards. 

3. Xuelei Fragrance Museum, Guangzhou, China

Xuelei Fragrance Museum, located in Guangzhou, China, is made up of eight, red-brick cylinder shapes of differing sizes

Located in Guangzhou, the Xuelei Fragrance Museum – opened in July 2025 – celebrates the history, craft and culture of perfume-making through immersive exhibitions and sensory installations. 

The museum combines contemporary architecture with interactive displays that explore fragrance ingredients, production methods and the emotional connection between scent and memory. 

Designed as both a cultural space and multi-sensory experience by the Shenzhen Huahui Architectural Design Institute, the museum allows visitors to engage with fragrance through sight, sound and smell. 

The structure itself is made up of eight, red-brick cylinder shapes of differing sizes that reflect the distillation process and raw materials, according to Arch Daily. 

Inside, visitors will discover nearly 20 thematic zones, over 50 immersive exhibits, and more than 300 interactive stations across six floors. 

4. MoN Takanawa: The Museum of Narratives, Tokyo, Japan

MoN Takanawa: The Museum of Narratives in Tokyo, Japan, is an ascending spiral of layered wood, glass and over 200 plant species

Opened in Tokyo’s Takanawa Gateway City development in March, MoN Takanawa: The Museum of Narratives blends art, technology and storytelling through large digital and immersive installations. 

Created as a futuristic cultural space spanning nine floors, the museum encourages visitors to interact with exhibitions that combine projection mapping, sound and AI-driven experiences, as reported by Japan Experience. 

Its flexible structure – an ascending spiral of layered wood, glass and over 200 plant species, designed by Kengo Kuma & Associates – allows exhibitions to constantly evolve, making each visit different from the last.

Inside, visitors will discover a 100-tatami-mat hall designed for performances, an LED-equipped theatre, rooftop foot baths with panoramic city views, multiple cafés and restaurants, and seasonal exhibitions spotlighting Japanese culture. 

5. Lost Shtetl Museum, Šeduva, Lithuania 

The Lost Shtetl Museum in Šeduva, Lithuania, resembles a small village that fits into the surrounding landscape

The Lost Shtetl Museum, opened in Šeduva in September 2025, tells the story of Litvak (Lithuanian Jewish) life before the Holocaust, preserving the memory of the region’s once-thriving shtetl communities.

Designed by Rainer Mahlamäki of Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Architects, the museum’s structure resembles a small village that fits seamlessly into the surrounding landscape. 

Through personal testimonies from Šeduva residents, historical artefacts and multimedia exhibitions, the museum explores everyday life, traditions and the devastating impact of World War II, according to Jewish News.

Aiming to create a reflective visitor experience, it features ten thematic exhibitions, memorial spaces like The Canyon of Hope and Path of Death, and a multi-sensory exhibit that recreates the final moments of the town’s Jewish population. 

Of all the museums on the list, Lost Shtetl is easiest accessed from the UK, with one-way Wizz Air flights from London Luton to Kaunas, a 90 minute drive away, costing just £18.

6. National Medal of Honor Museum, Arlington, United States

Located in Texas, United States is the National Medal of Honor Museum, its design inspired by the five branches of the Armed Services

Opened in Arlington, Texas, in March 2025, the National Medal of Honor Museum honours recipients of the United States’ highest military award through immersive exhibitions and personal storytelling. 

Designed by Rafael Viñoly Architects, the museum’s 37-ft-tall structure – a floating platform resting on five tapering, precast concrete piers – is inspired by the five branches of the Armed Services. 

The overall design is also said to evoke the ‘superhuman effort’ displayed by more than 3,500 recipients of the Medal of Honor. 

With a focus on themes of courage, sacrifice and service, recipients’ stories are brought to life through interactive displays, archival footage and first-hand accounts. 

Inside, visitors can explore virtual exhibits like Moments of Action, experience the legend and legacy of the Huey helicopter or learn about the evolving symbol of the award, as reported on the museum’s website. 

7. Islamic Civilization Centre, Tashkent, Uzbekistan

Located in Tashkent, Uzbekistan is The Islamic Civilization Centre, which features an ornate blue, 65-metre dome

The Islamic Civilization Centre, opened this year in Tashkent in March, showcases Uzbekistan’s rich Islamic heritage while highlighting the region’s contributions to science, art, literature and scholarship. 

Designed as both a research and cultural institution, the centre features exhibition halls, libraries and educational spaces displaying rare manuscripts, historical artefacts and Islamic art, according to Caspian Post. 

Across the museum, visitors can observe over 100 rare Quran manuscripts, a fragment of the Kiswah, a cloth that covers the Kaaba in Mecca, and the ‘Tree of Mahalla’ – an installation made up of 14,000 light points. 

Covering 10 hectares, the three-story building – designed by French architecture firm Wilmotte & Associés – combines traditional Uzbek design elements with modern construction, featuring an ornate blue, 65-metre dome. 



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