The museum is five stories high and 10,950 square meters in total.
The Age of Inventors exhibition hall.
Alexander Graham Bell's 1875 telephone behind an interactive transparent display.
The Maytag electric motor washing machine and Hoover vacuum cleaner that inspired Samsung’s home appliances division.
A video describes the history of the home appliances market.
Samsung identifies the Apple II as the "first home computer."
The museum highlights phones from the past, including the IBM Simon Personal Communicator, Samsung's SCH-V200 camera phone, and the Motorola StarTAC flip phone.
Smartwatches may be a hot topic in 2014, but Samsung released this Watch Phone back in 1999.
Samsung engraved its design principles and corporate values on the wall.
The Samsung History Hall tells the company's story through a series of boxes
Samsung's vision for the future of wearable computing includes watches, clothing, pendants, and eyewear.
The Televisor, invented by John Logie Baird, was the first TV sold to the public back in 1930.
Econo, Samsung's black-and-white TV from 1975. This was one of the company's first TV successes, capitalizing on the demand for energy-efficient products; by 1978, Samsung had over 40 percent of the market in South Korea.
Samsung's Galaxy S II was a huge hit for the company, selling more than 40 million units.