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Ramon Schneider
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Miniatur Wonderland: how much diversity is there in the smallest world in the world?

Ramon Schneider
8/8/2025
Pictures: Patrick Vogt

Miniatur Wonderland in Hamburg boasts precise detail and the perfect illusion. But the world on a 1:87 scale highlights both what’s there and what’s missing. I go in search for clues between the race track, rainbow flag and reality.

I got my first model car when I was four years old. It travelled for hours through my fantasy world: over books, under chairs, past Playmobil figures and Lego houses I’d built. Now, decades later, I’m standing in front of the miniature version of Monaco and the feeling of amazement is back. Childlike joy. The urge to take a closer look – but this time with a critical eye.

Short and sweet: two new worlds

But how much reality does this miniature world really show? I went through the exhibition with a different perspective, looking at who’s visible and who isn’t. Are there people with disabilities? Queer couples? People of colour? Scenes that not only show idylls but also social or political tension?

Wanted: visible diversity

I searched and occasionally discovered something: a person in a wheelchair on a bridge with stairs. A rainbow flag on a balcony. A banner to save the glaciers. But measured against the size and diversity of the model world, such scenes remain rare. The world is colourful, but conspicuously standardised.

Niklas Weissleder, press spokesperson for Miniatur Wonderland, says: «We endeavour to depict all people. But we’re often limited by the range of figures available.» The team creates some of the characters themselves, but many come batch produced. Rather than using a plan to decide which themes are presented, they develop ideas over time. Starting from one region, they build on it step by step.

Aspiration and reality

You can clearly see the progress. Newer areas such as Monaco or Rio appear more elaborate, more detailed and bolder than older areas such as Switzerland and the fictional town of Knuffingen. Evidently, our view of the world has also changed. However, this doesn’t create a true reflection of social reality – or only in fragments.

The very fact that so much is shown highlights the gaps all the more. Between tens of thousands of figures, hundreds of trains and countless details, it seems almost absurd how rarely you spot people with disabilities. Or queer couples. Or people of colour. Or scenes depicting poverty or social conflicts.

Side room snapshot of reality

It makes me wonder: if model making creates so much reality, why not show this reality too?

Between progress and figurine display case

The will to change is palpable. Even if a lot of statements from the press team remain general, it’s clear that they’d like diversity. However, the path to achieving this is laborious, fragmented and often limited by available resources and feasibility.

Perhaps this is precisely the crux of the matter. Whoever builds models decides what’s visible and what’s not. It’s not about politicising Wonderland, but about showing more of the world we all know. With everything that goes with it.

Verdict: a big world with small gaps

Miniatur Wonderland isn’t a political museum. It aims to inspire, amaze and awaken childhood memories. And they’ve succeeded in that. But precisely because this world is designed so precisely, so lovingly and with such attention to detail, the gaps stand out all the more. In a world that shows almost everything, why not include those who are often overlooked?

Maybe they need to zoom in at 1:87 scale to take another look. Something to ponder: if you were to build your own miniature world, who would you make visible?

Header image: Ramon Schneider

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