The Masharov’s House Museum has been open since 1994, at the intersection of Lenin and Turgenev streets (former Spasskaya and Politseyskaya streets). The museum building — a stone mansion — is a historical and architectural monument of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It was arguably built in the 1860s–1870s. Since the end of the 1890s, the estate belonged to the famous Tyumen industrialist, owner of the iron foundry, deputy of the city duma, and public figure Nikolay Dmitrievich Masharov. Today, the museum features the interiors of a city house of the late 19th — early 20th century and its main premises: a dining room, an office, a boudoir, a front living room, a children’s room, and a reception. The recreated interiors take visitors back to the past, to the history and life of the citizens of pre-revolutionary Tyumen.
Exhibits are marked with AR stickers for identification purposes.