Miniatur Wunderland
Miniatur Wunderland at the Speicherstadt district of Hamburg | |
| Company type | Limited liability company (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) |
|---|---|
| Industry | Model railway |
| Founded | 2000 |
| Headquarters | , |
Key people | Frederik & Gerrit Braun, Stephan Hertz |
| Revenue | 40,7 Mio. Euro (2023) |
Number of employees | 442 (2023) (~ 300 FTE) |
| Website | miniatur-wunderland.com |
The Miniatur Wunderland (German for: Miniature Wonderland) is, according to Guinness World Records, the largest model railway system in the world. It is located at the historic Speicherstadt in Hamburg and is one of the most popular and most visited sights in Germany.
The exhibition includes around 1,230 digitally controlled trains with more than 12,000 wagons. The Wonderland is also designed with around 5,280 houses and bridges, more than 11,800 vehicles – of which around 350 drive independently on the installation – 52 airplanes and around 290,000 figures. The system features a recurring day-night lighting cycle and almost 500,000 built-in LED lights. Of the 10,000 m2 (107,639 sq ft) of floorspace, the models occupies 1,694 m2 (18,234 sq ft).
As of May 2025, the railway consisted of 16,491 m (54,104 ft) of track in H0 scale with 3,600 switches and 1,400 signals, divided into twelve sections: Harz mountains, the fictitious town of Knuffingen, the Alps and Austria, Hamburg, America, Scandinavia, Switzerland, a replica of Hamburg Airport, Italy, Rio de Janeiro, Patagonia and Monaco/Provence. Planning is also in progress for the construction of sections for Central America and the Caribbean and perhaps Great Britain.