Bunker museum
The Bunker Museum Jansje Schong is an initiative of the Egmond 40-45 Foundation and was opened in 2016. It takes its name from a girl from Egmond, who died in 1944 in the explosion of a dud. It is housed in a well-preserved ammunition bunker, which was part of the Atlantic Wall. This was the defense line of the German occupier against a possible attack by the Allies, traces of which can still be found all over the coastal landscape. The museum organizes guided tours and shows temporary exhibitions about the Second World War.