
MOMO
The MOMU Motorsport Museum was officially opened by FIA President Jean Todt on April 6, 2018.
MOMU presents various areas of motorsports, including auto-motosport and jet skis, throughout almost the entire program. Special attention is paid to racing machines made in Estonia at MOMU. A total of 8 different companies producing racing equipment have operated in Estonia throughout history. The most prominent of these was the formula manufacturer TARK-Kavor, which in the 1980s was the 2nd largest manufacturer in the world in terms of production.
MOMU presents 252 racing-related cars, motorcycles or racing boats, as well as a very wide selection of accessories.
MOMU - gallery
Views of MOMU exhibits! What you see in the pictures changes over time - depending on how we display temporary and more special exhibits, whether there is a temporary exhibition or a special event going on!
MOMU - exhibits
100 years of motorsport
100 years is a good time to make generalizations
Looking at the history of motorsports, the question always arises as to how we have managed to be consistently successful and move forward in this complex field. In fact, our history of motorsports is longer than the country we live in.
We are celebrating our 100th anniversary since the first official competition held in the Republic of Estonia (August 28, 1921). But we were already involved in racing in the Russian Empire, according to the possibilities and available technology at the time.
Why we set all the indicators to zero and started reading history again – liberation, independence, our own country – are certainly some of the right answers. But in auto-motorsports, we already had a certain amount of feeling and knowledge before the first race. We just continued and took the best from the republican era with us to move forward.
To date, our auto-motorsport has developed through four socio-economic formations. Philosophically, the development should have been along a spiral - each subsequent round at a slightly higher level.