First exhibitions 1986 (≈ 1986)
Start of collections outside the walls
1988
Construction
Construction 1988 (≈ 1988)
Coloured industrial architecture
1989
Opening of the museum
Opening of the museum 1989 (≈ 1989)
Permanent installation in Moirans-en-Montagne
2001
Don Chantal Lombard
Don Chantal Lombard 2001 (≈ 2001)
1,200 toys from 33 countries
2003
Acquisition collection Canet-en-Roussillon
Acquisition collection Canet-en-Roussillon 2003 (≈ 2003)
4,000 toys including antiques
2009
Don Jean-Pierre Rossie
Don Jean-Pierre Rossie 2009 (≈ 2009)
700 toys from Sahara/Atlas
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Chantal Lombard - Ethnologist
Donor of 1,200 toys (2001)
Jean-Pierre Rossie - Anthropologist
Donor of 700 toys (2009)
Origin and history
The Toy Museum was founded in 1986 with the first travelling exhibitions of games and toys, before settling permanently in 1989 in Moirans-en-Montagne. Its collections, originally made up of donations from local manufacturers and artisans, have been enriched by technical objects and tools related to Jurassian production since the 19th century. The museum showcases emblematic pieces of French (Jouef, JEP) and international (Lego, Playmobil), reflecting the industrial and cultural evolution of the toy.
In 2001, the ethnologist Chantal Lombard offered 1,200 toys from 33 countries, while in 2003 the museum acquired 4,000 pieces from the Canet-en-Roussillon Museum, including ancient Sumerian, Greek and Byzantine toys. In 2009, Jean-Pierre Rossie completed the collections with 700 unique toys from the Sahara and Atlas. These contributions, combined with regular donations (Indian toys, archives of local companies), make the museum a world reference, covering 5,000 years of fun history.
The building, built in 1988, adopts a colourful industrial aesthetic (yellow, green, blue) and now houses nearly 20,000 objects. Labelled Musée de France, it combines ethnological heritage, technical history and regional memory, illustrating both Jurassian know-how and international cultural exchanges. Its interest also lies in the preservation of machines and tools related to the traditional manufacture of toys.
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