Arkitekturens Dag / Architecture Day 2021

Today, the 4th October, is Architecture Day - new connections to nature and Arkitektforeningen - the Danish Association of Architects - has a list of the events throughout the country.

The theme of the programme this year is nature and green architecture with a wide range of events from an exhibition in Herning about new buildings with connections to nature to a reading of her essay on Nature and the city by Ellen Braae and a lecture by Karsten Thorlund of the architecture firm SLA on the connection between city and nature in Aalborg.

There are conducted tours of housing in a rural setting in Norre Søby, Christiansfeld and Nær Heden west of Copenhagen and also lectures, ceremonies for the presentation of design awards and a number of discussion sessions including a debate about Copenhagen as a green city of the future.

Many of the projects are visually stunning and make a clear attempt to take on board the problems that climate change now forces us to tackle but there is a danger that, although innovative engineering has begun to tackle threats from storm cloud burst floods, there is a danger that some of the landscape settings become the latest fashion for municipal planting and perilously close to green washing where, in fact, any prevarication will mean that future solutions may well have to be much more dramatic, intrusive and expensive.

In some cases, attractive and more natural planting around new suburban developments and well-insulated homes from recycled materials may not "cut the mustard" and resettlements, severe containment of urban growth to halt the the spread into surrounding countryside and intensive cultivation for food rather than attractive ponds and tame re-wilding may be forced on countries and particularly where they are vulnerable to rising sea levels.

Arkitektforeningen / Association of Architects
Architecture Day - new connections to nature - programme

A project to re-establish the old Skærevej between Hammershus and Allinge .... Erik Brandt Dam with Realdania and the Danish Nature Agency

photograph: Bjørn Pierri

 
 

Hvalsø: Debat, udstilling og aktiviter
…. and a discussion with the architect Jan Albrechtsen from Vandkunsten to be streamed live

Hedehusene: Nærheden - fremtidens grønne og bæredygtige forstad
a city walk to look at large-scale green open space in the district

the Ministry of Culture

the south front of the Ministry of Culture from Thorvaldsens Museum on Slotsholmen

On 19 September 1961, Julius Bomholt was appointed to be the first Minister for Kulturelle Anliggender or Minister of Cultural Affairs so today marks the 60th anniversary of the establishment of a Danish Ministry of Culture.

In 1986, after the minister was given additional areas of responsibility, there was a change of name to Kultur - og kommunikationsminister or Minister of Culture and Communications and then in 1988 the title was shortened to Kulturminister or Minister for Culture

The current Kulturminister is Ane Halsboe-Jørgensen. 

As a relatively small country, Denmark has just 20 cabinet minister -including the post of statsminister or prime minister - and, by tradition, the minister for culture also has responsibility for religion and for sport.

Beyond the major departments of government such as Finance, Justice, Defence and Foreign Affairs, the remit of the various ministers and their formal titles reveals much about the priorities set by a government and how ministers divide responsibility.

Denmark has a minister for children and education, a minister for science, technology and higher education and a minister for industry, business and financial affairs - all with some significant overlaps with culture.

On 16 September 1963 - so two years after it was established - the Ministry of Culture moved into the present building after the completion of extensive restoration works guided by the architect Peter Koch.

Kultur ministeriet / Ministry of Culture

now, the Minister for Culture is responsible for .........

cultural heritage in Denmark including:
archaeology, ancient monuments and dikes
buildings and environments worthy of preservation
building conservation

castles and properties through The Palaces and Culture Agency:
castles and castle gardens
construction projects
operation, development and events

cultural institutions including:
libraries
folk high schools
organisations and bodies for the performing arts
zoological facilities

cultural cooperation:
for children and young people
international cooperation
cultural agreements with municipalities

media:
grants for media
radio and TV
written media

 

note:
In France the Ministère des Affaires culturelles or Ministery of Culture was created by Charles de Gaulle in 1959 and he appointed André Malraux - author of Museum without walls as the first minister.

Since 1959, there have been thirteen changes of name as the minister was given new areas of responsibility including the environment, communication and the celebration of the French bicentenary.

In the United Kingdom, the Labour government was, presumably, wary of the idea of 'culture' so Jennie Lee was appointed the first Minister of State for the Arts in 1964. She played an important part in setting up the Open University and she consolidated and strengthened the role of the Arts Council.

In the UK Ministers of Culture rarely stay in the post for long, many seeing responsibility for art and museums as a stepping stone to something more important, so there have been 28 different ministers in all since 1964. As in other countries, the formal title for the minister has changed to reflect additional responsibilities so to Secretary of State for National Heritage from April 1992; Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport from May 1997; Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport from 2010; Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport from 2012 and Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport since 2017.

In Italy ministerial responsibility for culture came under education until 1974 when the Ministero per i Beni Culturali ed Ambientali, the Ministry for Cultural Assets and Environments, was established. There have been 27 ministers since 1974 and the official title of the minister has changed several times, taking on responsibility for cultural heritage and activities in 1998 and then tourism but in 2021 the ministry reverted to the simpler title of Ministero della cultura.

In Germany, presumably with politicians still wary of being seen to promote culture as a strong aspect of national identity, administration for culture is at the level of the Länder rather than under a single minister in the national government. 


the building on Nybrogade and Det Kongelige Assistenshuset

After the fire that destroyed a large area of the city in 1728, the building on this plot at the corner of Gammel Strand and Nybrogade - owned by the wealthy State councillor Christen Bjerregaard - was rebuilt in brick around three sides of a courtyard with the fourth side, towards the canal, closed by a wall and a gateway.

Main rooms were on the north frontage, towards Snaregade, and in the east range and on the ground floor of the west range there was a carriage house.

The building was let to Minister CA von Berckentin from 1740 until 1755 when he moved to a mansion in Bredgade (the Odd Fellow Mansion) and the house on the canal was then sold to two French hat manufacturers who conducted their business from the basement and rented out the rest of the property.

In 1757 the house was sold to the Norwegian Maritime Administrations Kvæsthus and Assistenshus and rebuilt to designs by Philip de Lange - the most fashionable architect of the period - with the work completed in 1765

A range of new rooms was added across the side towards the canal, where there was previously a screen wall. The main feature of the new front to the canal is an ornately-decorated entrance to the courtyard through a central gate arch.

The building was given more prominence in 1857 when the Vejerhus - the Weighing House - and Accisehus or Customs House buildings, immediately to the east, were demolished.


Det Kongelige Assistenshus was a mortgage company established by a royal ordinance in 1688. The privilege was granted first to the merchant Nicolai Wesling and the assistenhus was Initially in a building he owned on Kvæsthusgade close to Nyhavn. On the death of Wesling the privilege passed to Diderik Frandsen Klevenow in Frederikborggade.

Following bankruptcy in the middle of the 18th century, Assistenshus, by then in Snaregade, became a royal institution and appears to have moved to this building at the corner of Nybrogade and Gammel Strand in the late 18th century.

Increasingly unprofitable, presumably because it was unable to compete with commercial banks, the institution was closed by the Folketning in 1974 and unredeemed mortgages were sold at auction.

Daguerretype by T Neubourgh from 1840 showing Gammel Strand with Assistenshus just visible on the left edge behind the
Vejerhus - the Weighing House - and Accisehus or Customs House -
the large building that looks like a warehouse with a yard with low buildings
and, in front with a hipped roof, Pramlaugets Hus - the Bargemens' Guild House
these buildings, at the west end of Gammel Strand were demolished in 1857
- Museum of Copenhagen archive 74210

Assistenshuus in 1902 - Museum of Copenhagen archive 64215

note:
For a detailed assessment of how the harbour at Gammel Strand developed through the medieval and early modern period see Gammel Strand Archaeological Report from Københavns Museum following the excavation of the site in 2014 that was undertaken before the construction of the new metro station at Gammel Strand.

 

Solutions at Royal Danish Academy

Architecture Design Conservation: graduate projects 2021

Shown here are 220 projects from the students in the schools of architecture, design and conservation who have graduated from the Royal Danish Academy in 2021.

This is an opportunity to see the work of the Academy schools, with their focus on the UN Sustainability goals, and these projects show clearly the ways in which teaching has taken onboard the challenge of climate change and the need to reassess our approach to materials for new developments and our approach to the increasing need to conserve or adapt existing buildings.

Here are the young architects and designers of the next generation whose designs for buildings and for furniture, industrial products, fashion and graphics will have to provide solutions to the new challenges.

As last year, the graduate projects can also be seen on line.

note:
after an initial opening in late June, the exhibition closed through July but then reopened on 2 August and can be seen daily from 10.00 to 17.00 through to 20 August 2021

Royal Danish Academy Architecture Design Conservation
Philip de Langes Allé 10
1435 Copenhagen K

Graduation 2021: SOLUTIONS
the exhibition on line

 
Solutions Grid.jpeg
 

Bygningspræmiering / Copenhagen Building Awards 2021

Bygningspræmiering -The Copenhagen Building Award - was established in 1903 and, each year, is granted to buildings that have made an outstanding contributed to the 'physical framework' of the city and reflect the importance of good architecture in the life of the city.

It is important that these buildings reflect the special character of of the city and contribute to the quality of its built environment.

For the building awards there are four categories:

A: nybyggeri / new building
B: omdannelse / restoration
C: renovation of apartments in a building that had another purpose
D: bymiljø / urban environment

For 2021, the Committee assessing the award: 

Culture and Leisure Committee
Nicolai Bo Andersen and Rosa Siri Lund, experts appointed by the Academic Architects' Association
Lisa Sørensen, expert appointed by IDA / Ingeniørforeningen Danmark
Camilla van Deurs, City Architect, Technical and Environmental Administration
Mette Haugaard Jeppesen, architect, Technical and Environmental Administration

Here are the buildings and engineering projects that have been short listed for the award in 2021 and they show just how diverse the built environment of the city is and all would be more than worthy winners.

Until 20 April, the public can vote for a public winner through the web site of the City Kommune and the overall winners of Building Awards will be announced on 27 April 2021 

The Award-Winning City, Hans Helge Madsen and Otto Käszner
The Danish Architectural Press 2003

Bygningspræmiering
the public vote

 

Amager Bakke, Vindmøllevej 6, 2300 København S
architect: BIG - Bjarke Ingels Group
engineers: MOE

category: nybyggeri / new building

 

 

L1240577.jpg

Charlottetårnet / The Charlotte Tower, Hjørringgade 35, 2100 København Ø
architect: Lundgaard & Tranberg Arkitekter A/S
engineers: COWI A/S

category: nybyggeri / new building

 

L1187319.JPG

L1066590.JPG

Cityringen / Metro Inner Ring
architects: Arup
engineers: COWI Systra

category: nybyggeri / new building and bymiljø / urban environment

 

 

 

L1066430.JPG
L1066570.JPG

L1176292.JPG

Enghaveparken - Klimapark / Climate Park, Enghaveparken, 1761 København V
architects: TREDJE NATUR and Platant
engineer: COWI

category: bymiljø / urban environment


L1176478.JPG

Frihedsmuseet / The Freedom Museum, Churchillparken 6, 2100 København Ø
architects: Lundgaard & Tranberg Arkitekter
engineers: EKJ Rådgivende Ingeniører A/S, DEM Dansk and Energi Management A/S

category: nybyggeri / new building


Københavns Museum / Copenhagen Museum, Stormgade 18, 1555 København V 
architects:  Rørbæk og Møller Arkitekter A/S, LETH & GORI. Udstillingsarkitekt / exhibition architects: JAC studios
engineer: Hundsbæk & Henriksen A/S

category: omdannelse / restoration


Klostergårdens plejehjem og Seniorbofællesskabet Sankt Joseph /
The Cloister nursing home and the Seniour Community of Sankt Joseph,
Strandvejen 91, 2100 København Ø
architects: RUBOW arkitekter A/S
engineer: Sweco Danmark A/S

category: omdannelse / restoration








L1187307.JPG

Lille Langebro / Little Langebro, Vestervoldgade Langebrogade, København K
architects: Wilkinson Eyre Architects
engineer: Buro Happold Engineering

category: nybyggeri / new building

 

 

L1033948.JPG

L1044541.JPG
L1044548.JPG

Nørrebro Bibliotek / Nørrebro Library, Nørrebrogade 208, 2200 København N
architects: Keingart Space_Activators
engineer: Alfa Ingeniører A/S (For Ason Entreprenører)

category: omdannelse / restoration


Mozart House.JPG

image created using Google Earth

Træhus i Sydhavnen / Wooden House in Sydhavnen, HF Havebyen Mozart 74, 2450 København SV
architects: Peter Kjær
engineer: Ole Vanggaard, Tommi Haferbier

category:  nybyggeri / new building

 

money made available to restore the Soup Tureen

The city has just now announced that a block of money has been made available for a number of restoration projects and for work to improve a number of streets or public areas.

One of the projects will be the restoration of the pavilion on the major road interchange north of the lakes at Trianglen.

Dating from 1907, the building was designed by PV Jensen-Klint and was waiting rooms and public toilets where several major tram routes terminated or crossed.

The copper roof, with it’s distinct and striking shape, soon earned the building the nickname of Super Terrin or Terrinen although it was also known as Bien … the bee …. from the name of a kiosk here at one time.

Bien at Trianglen
Trianglen

the Mindcraft Project 2021

With restrictions imposed by the pandemic, the Mindcraft Project for 2021 is presented on line.

There are ten pioneering works:

300kg Beauty Bath, by Frederik Nystrup-Larsen & Oliver Sundqvist
Suspense, by Kasper Kjeldgaard
In-tangibles, by Stine Mikkelsen
Bench 01 and Bedside Tables, by Bahraini-Danish
Ctenophora Vase, Echinoidea Bowl, Morning Dip Side Table, by 91-92
Textile Veneer, by Else-Rikke Bruun
Ebano, by Rasmus Fenmann
Architectural Glass Fantasies, by Stine Bidstrup
Chair 02, by Archival Studies
Ombre Light, by Mette Schelde

On the site there is an introduction to Mindcraft and the ‘exhibition’ and then information about each of the works with dimensions and the materials used but the key feature is a short video for each work where the designers and artists talk about the concept and the design process and about the techniques used to produce the finished work.

One characteristic that unites these amazing works is their restraint.


From 2008 through to 2013, the annual Mindcraft exhibitions were organised by Danish Crafts and from 2014 to 2018 by Danish Arts Foundation.
The first Mindcraft Project from Copenhagen Design Agency was in 2020.

Svanemølleværket is to be a new museum of technology

It has been confirmed that Svanemølleværket power station will be decommissioned by 2023.

After the building is passed to the control of By&Havn - the port authority of Copenhagen - it will be converted to be a new museum of technology with the collections of Danmarks Tekniske Museum in Helsingør moved here to the old works. Dorte Mandrup has been appointed architect for the project.

This was announced provisionally in February 2019 but the final decision has been delayed by the pandemic.

Swan Mill Works was the last major design by the architect Louis Hygom (1879-1950). Work began in 1947 and the massive building was completed in 1953. The power station is constructed in reinforced concrete but is faced with brick.

Originally the power station was coal fired but in 1985 it was converted to gas to produce area heating from its six boilers and five turbines. 

The works is dramatic and monumental in scale. Hygom, who also designed later parts of HC Ørestedsværket - the power station at the south end of the harbour - was an architect of the  Neoclassist school in the early decades of the 20th century and the design is not only rational and functional but it has striking and even beautiful proportions.

The challenge in this next stage will be to keep to a minimum changes to the fenestration and restrict the insertion of new windows and doors.

HC Ørestedsværket

Danmarks Tekniske Museum
Dorte Mandrup

 
 
 

Det skjulte Slotsholmen / The hidden Slotsholmen

Rigsdagsgården, Christiansborg, København

An exhibition in the great courtyard in front of the entrance to the parliament building. 

Slotsholm is a large and almost square island with canals on three side and the harbour on the fourth side. The natural island was much smaller than the present extent of Slotsholm and was the site of an early-medieval castle of which parts remain below the present parliament building. The castle was extended and the island enlarged and became the main royal palace in the city. There were royal stables here and a church and a complex development of buildings dating back to the early 17th century that housed government officials and administrative buildings and store rooms for the state … so, for instance, the 17th-century arsenal for the navy. After a major fire in the late 18th-century the royal family decamped to Amalienborg and decided to remain there and, although the large royal palace was rebuilt, it became the home of the Danish parliament although the great State Apartments at Christiansborg are still used for major royal events.

The photographs and text in the exhibition look at not just the main buildings of the first great royal palace and parliament on the island but includes fascinating facts and social and political history that reveals much about how the Danish monarchy and democratic government in Denmark has evolved.

Access to the exhibition is at any time as the courtyard and the route through Christiansborg is open to all pedestrians and cyclists.

There are tours of Slotsholmen with guides from Teatermuseet i Hofteatret / the Theatre Museum and the Court Theatre.

the exhibition and tours continue until 6 December 2020

Det skjulte Slotsholmen
tours and guides

Parken, the Danish National Stadium, is to be modernised

Parken - the stadium from Øster Allé

Parken, the national stadium, in Østerbro, has a prominent location on the east side of Fælledparken, and is on the site of an earlier stadium - Idrætsparken.

Designed by Gert Andersson, work on the new stadium started in 1990 and it opened in 1992 with a capacity of 38,000.

Record attendance is actually 60,000 people but that was not for a football match but for the Michael Jackson concert in 1997 and the roof was not added for the comfort of players or spectators but for a Eurovision Song Contest.

In the new work under the architects CF Møller, capacity in the stadium will be increased, with the stands rebuilt, and new office buildings will be constructed at three of the four corners.


Kulturministriet - the Danish Ministry of Culture - is in the centre of Copenhagen - in an old merchant’s house on Nybrogade - at the west end of Gammel Strand

With the return of the government to Borgen for the Autumn session, there have been rumours that Kulturministriet - the Ministry of Culture - could be reorganised.

Joy Mogensen, the current Minister of Culture, has a double portfolio for she is also Minister of Ecclesiastical Affairs but, in addition, has ministerial responsibility for sport in Denmark.

I know many describe football as an art and fans worship their star players and follow their chosen sport with religious devotion and, maybe - in our post-Coronavirus world - getting crowds back, is the priority now, for managers of football stadiums and managers of theatres, but can religion, culture and sport really be seen as completely easy bedfellows under a single minister?

This spotlights … or maybe floodlights …. a problem that all small or relatively small countries have and that is how you cover everything with a relatively small number of people.

In Denmark, there are around 25 ministerial departments and the ruling party here - currently the Social Democratic Party - has 48 members of parliament out of a total of 179 who are elected to Folketinget - the Danish parliament - so in theory over half of the MPs could be ministers.

In comparison, the Tory Prime Minister in Britain appoints ministers from its 364 members of parliament - out of a total of 650 seats in the Lower House - and they can also bring in as ministers any of the 245 Conservative peers, out of a total of 1,422, in the House of Lords. In theory, that is a much larger gene pool but I would not dare to comment on which ministers from which parliaments in which country can be seen to be better at running things in their respective countries at the moment.

 

COBE on Frederiksberg Allé

select any image to open as sllde show

 
 

This new apartment building on Frederiksberg Allé - designed by COBE and built over a new metro station - sets a new standard for building in the city and deserves to win the Arne prize next year.

OK … it’s the slab and clad building method I rant about and rail against but that is when it is done badly with lazy or boring or cavalier design. This building shows exactly what can be done to produce an elegant and clever building by using the free tools any architect has of understanding and appreciating the use of proportion, logic, composition of masses, texture, colour tone and, with COBE, an astute knowledge of Copenhagen building traditions and an empathy with the city and its streetscapes.

The site is a square plot approximately 35 metres wide and 35 metres deep that was cleared for construction work on the new metro line and for an important new metro station here at the centre of the Allé. There was a large villa here that broke or weakened the street line so this project has been an opportunity to establish a clear and well defined street frontage but also with a sense of a new space created at the cross roads by stepping back to the corner in stages along both Frederiksberg Allé and on Platanvej - the side street.

Metro trains now run under the cross roads at an angle and, as the general principal for the metro is that both platforms and the ticket halls and entrance stairs all work in line with the train tracks, that set the angle of the lift tower to the platforms and dictated that the main entrance to the metro should be across the corner and not from either the main street or the side road. Of course the lifts and staircases could have been buried into the building, disguising or ignoring that diagonal angle, but that would not have been a challenge and much of the very best architecture is good because it works with and overcomes the problems of a specific site.

It is also important that the architects of the new building understand the main vocabulary or language of the buildings along the street …. that is, substantial apartment buildings of a high quality with angle turrets at road intersections and the use of decoration to indicate individuality or difference and status. Here the architects from COBE have resisted any temptation to produce a pastiche with domes or flourishes but use strong composition by building up elements to a corner tower and by doing that well they actually get away with producing a building that is much taller and much more solid than anything that might otherwise have been rejected by the planning authority. Given the importance of this historic street and given the potential criticism that could have landed on the desks of politicians from the wealthy and articulate people who live in the expensive homes in this neighbourhood, it had to be right.

The panels of pale brick have either areas of raised header bricks or raised courses of bricks for texture and plain sunk panels on some areas show that actually it does not need much projection or recession to throw a little shadow across the facade for definition. Many of the new buildings in the city are too flat - with no use of recession or projection - even by a slight amount - to give the facade some life.

Here, bricks are set horizontally, in the conventional way on walls where headers are pulled forward, producing a darker surface with the same colour of brick but set vertically and with much longer bricks than is normal on the sections of wall on the corner tower to produce a much softer tone that gives the wall a sheen that is almost like a textile. The windows have a projecting frame or simple architrave of headers and window frames are thin and set back but produce what looks almost like a graphic line to define the openings. There is a clever use of blind panels within the brick frames of the windows above the metro entrance to disguise a high lost area or service mezzanine inside. All this, and the good proportions of the whole and the parts, is an aspect of the design that any good 18th-century architect would understand and respect.

I’m still not convinced that the lack of any definition below the brick but above the wide openings at the corner does not look slightly weak. Steel and concrete can span any space like this without obvious support on the material of the wall face - structural features such as lintels or arches - but without them a wall hanging above a void looks insubstantial - as if it could all slide down - but here it does work because looking at the building, from the angle, it is rather like a chest of drawers with the drawers half pulled out and the corner lifted up. And then the glass tower of the metro lift slides forward under the whole lot like an actress taking the applause, slipping under the curtain of the proscenium arch. Prose too florid? Ok but it does reflect the drama of the building but drama done with an almost minimalist restraint. If this does not win an award for being the best new building in the city it certainly deserves an award for being the classiest.

To simplify what is a complicated plan, essentially, there are three parts to the building with that rectangular block cutting in from the corner and containing the metro station. On either side is a high open space rising through two floors, basically triangular and filling out the space of the plot on either side of that metro rectangle. On the initial plans there were small units on either side to create a food court with tables around the escalators that drop down to the metro platforms but in the end there are two larger restaurants and what is now a florist. On a mezzanine level are two small halls and facilities - the kulturhus - that can be rented for local events.

Above, and almost self contained, are 30 homes arranged in a squat L shape around an open courtyard that is a garden high above the street. From the courtyard itself there is access to six town houses each on two floors, with all but the corner house with dual aspects to the courtyard and to Frederiksberg Allé and then, piled on top, is another block pf six town houses above that and with roof terraces. On the west arm of the L there are relatively narrow studio flats, again with dual aspect but to the courtyard and to Platanvej - across the west side of the plot.

Upper levels of the housing are reached by open lift and stair towers with black metal framework and railings a little too much like cages. Lower apartments have entrance doors from the courtyard and the upper apartments from open external galleries … not the most common form of apartment building in the city where normally, in larger buildings, there will be a series of separate entrances along a front with separate staircases and lifts at each door and single apartments on either side at each level. Here, with the wide entrance to the metro across the corner and the commercial area on the ground floor, that was not an option.

On the courtyard side, the restrained style of the brickwork of the street frontages is abandoned for large panels of wood facing but with the grey brick used for a framing. Windows on the courtyard side are arranged with an unnecessary asymmetry and the staircases and balconies, with their black railings, begin to look a bit too much like an Escher drawing. What is good is that upper levels of the building not only step up to the corner so building up visually to the corner turret with its penthouse apartment, but they also step in or back at upper levels to disguise the height of the building when seen from street level and that also means that upper access galleries, from the lifts to the separate houses at the upper level, do not project but are on the roofs of deeper houses below and there are terraces or roof gardens on the set back so, for once, this is a major apartment block with no projecting balconies.

Frederiksberg mad-&kulturhus
COBE

 

the staircase in the south range of the Arsenal

If you go out to the Arsenal to check out the new Ferm store then make sure you look at the main staircase that is just inside the entrance at the east end of the building.

This has turned balusters with closed strings and a very substantial wooden handrail and it rises from the ground floor to the first floor with a straight flight of steps but with a landing half way up.

The style suggests it should be from the original construction of the building in the 1760s although contemporary plans indicate that then the staircase was at the other end of the building - at the north-west corner - and with a different arrangement or plan that was a tight dogleg with half landings.

The range was originally part of the Arsenal where cannons were stored on the ground floor and other weapons and equipment kept on the first floor but in the 19th century the building was modified by the navy to be used as a gymnasium and the staircase may have been rebuilt or moved and reconstructed here at that stage.

What is interesting about the staircase is that, with the restoration work, the sub structure has been left exposed and this shows hefty or robust and high-quality timber framing below the staircase with heavy posts, cross beams supporting three strings below the steps and substantial cross braces. Clearly it was designed for heavy use.

a new Natural History Museum and the Botanic Gardens

 

The Botanical gardens in Copenhagen have reopened from the lockdown and they look superb.

The gardens here were laid out in the late 19th century as part of the expansion of the city after the city gates; the ramparts, and the outer defences dating from the 17th century were removed.

This work had been discussed for some years but became a priority with an outbreak of cholera in 1853 when there was a substantial loss of life. It is not surprising that the first major new buildings that were constructed as the defences came down were a new hospital completed in 1863 and a new water works on the site of a bastion on the outer edge of the old defences and just inside the lakes at their south end. Both groups of buildings survive.

Initial plans drawn up in the 1850s showed the ramparts and outer ditches removed or levelled completely and new streets and squares as a continuous band of large new residential areas around the north and west sides of the old city that continued out as far as the lakes.

But the next priorities for the city are less obvious and more interesting. A new Observatory, the Østervold Observatory, was completed in 1861 to replace the royal observatory on the top of the Round Tower in the centre of the old city and it was built north of the King's Gardens on one of the highest points of the defences.

By then, the decision must have been made to retain sections of the outer water-filled defences below the ramparts and these stretches of water then became the centre of a series of parks that were laid out in an arc around the old city.

The park below the observatory became a new Botanical Garden that replaced gardens just south of Nyhavn and behind the palace of Charlottenborg.

A Palm House designed by Peter Christian Bønnecke for the gardens was completed in 1874 with a new Botanisk Museum by H N Fussing near the south corner of the gardens completed in 1877 and the Botanical Laboratory was completed in 1890.

On the north side of the gardens, a Technical and Engineering College was opened in 1889 and at the north-east corner and close to the National Gallery, Statens Museum for Kunst, a Museum of Mineralogy was completed in 1893.


The reopening of the Botanical Gardens at the end of May was an opportunity to see the major excavation works for a new Natural History Museum that is being built within the buildings and courtyards of the Technical College. Den Polytekniske Læreanstadt is a large and fairly severe brick building around a courtyard that was designed by Johan Daniel Herholdt with an entrance front to Solvgade and a long frontage to Øster Farimagsgade.

The new Natural History Museum has been designed by the Danish architects Lundgaard & Tranberg with a striking whale hall that will be in the courtyard of the 19th-century building and there will be new galleries and museum facilities extending back towards the Palm House but below ground with a new landscape above.

Early articles, about this new museum, have promoted this development as part of a new centre for earth sciences and it will provide an amazing, world-class centre for research and teaching.

Natural History Museum of Denmark, Botanical Gardens
the new Natural History Museum
Lundgaard & Tranberg Arkitekter

 
Botanic Garden.jpg

①   Østervold Observatory, Christian Hansen, 1861
②  Palm House, Peter Christian Bønnecke, 1872-1874
③  Botanisk Museum, HN Fussing, 1877
④  Den Polytekniske Læreanstadt / Technical and Engineering College,
Johan Daniel Herholdt, 1889
⑤   Botanical Laboratory, Gothersgade, Johan Daniel Herholdt, 1890
⑥   Mineralogisk Museum, Hans Jørgen Holm, 1893

Ⓐ  Nørreport - train station and metro station

Ⓑ  the entrance to the 17th-century palace of Rosenborg
Ⓒ  Statens Museum for Kunst / National Gallery of Art, Vilhelm Dahlerup, 1896
Ⓓ  Den Hirschsprungske Samling / the Hirschsprung Gallery, 1911
Ⓔ  the General Hospital completed in 1863 from designs by Christian Hansen

 
 

Carlsberg Byen

L1132341.JPG

I keep going back up the hill to walk around the building site that is the Carlsberg redevelopment area in the misplaced hope it will look better but each time it looks worse …. more densely built up with the industrial heritage more and more overwhelmed and over shadowed as the new tower blocks crammed onto the site rise and rise and rise.

Eventually, and maybe soon, architects and planners will begin to understand that this is one of the greatest missed opportunities in the building history of the city. Not a missed opportunity to make money of course but that is the problem.

As you walk around, then what is obvious is that accountants or the money men must have overseen or overruled every decision ……. move that block ten metres that way and make that a tower rather than a courtyard and you can squeeze another block in there.

OK, it's still a massive construction site but enough is finished that you can judge pretty well what the end result will look like.

For a start, old brewery buildings have, at best, become bit players or, at worst, they have been gutted to become frontages … a sort of inconvenient façade that has been grudgingly retained.

Or what were grand buildings that impressed because they were so big and so weird but somehow so right …. a chimney ringed by dragons, a gate tower supported on elephants … now look little and insignificant …. the amazing chimney no more than a street sculpture in a back courtyard.

The remarkable asset of the site was that rare commodity in Copenhagen ….. slopes …. because this is at least a hill even if it was never a berg.

There are odd flights of steps up but generally to courtyards raised over car parks but it could and should have been all so much more dramatic. The starting point should have been the topography and the amazing historic buildings. Instead, the starting point was the bottom line.

When Bohrs Tårn / Bohr Tower was criticised, one of the architects explained that Carlsberg Byen was to be seen as a Tuscan hill town and to judge the development on just the first of the tower blocks to be completed would be like judging San Gimignano from a single tower but I've been to San Gimignano and Carlsberg, rising up beyond Vesterbro, sure isn't a Tuscan hill town.

There are a couple of nice little squares so Jan Gehl and his team seem to have had some influence but again, it could and should have been so much better. The drama has been stripped out where there could have been a progression through a sequence of good spaces and good views through and across the site should have made use of being able to look down or look across or look up to another building and there could have been more play with scale but this is a development that has managed to make four life-sized stone elephants look small.

 

From a visit years ago, I remember a playground that was in a tree-lined hollow with an incredible suspended walkway and a car hanging in the trees and was amazed, back then, to see how imaginative planners could be and how committed they were to children not just playing but pushing boundaries. Trying to find the site now, it is a construction yard but it looks as if the coombe will be crammed into the back yard of a tower where it can only be a damp and overshadowed hollow for apartment balconies to look down on.

If you prefer a stripped-down modern Scandinavian aesthetic, then the old buildings of the brewery were difficult to like but at least you can appreciate the money that was spent on some incredible craft and building skills. And there are some more recent but imaginative buildings that play with ideas and with materials so the brick terraces of De hængende Haver / the Hanging Gardens or the golden discs of Lagerkælderen - the cellar that was not a cellar.

The new buildings are basically all concrete slab blocks of various heights and most are fairly standard with relatively standard but relatively large apartments so all that really differentiates them is the unfettered use of cladding …. anything goes as long as it's different. And the other factor you have to consider here, even if you can afford an apartment, is if you have enough money to get an apartment and a balcony that is not in shadow or overlooked. A large number of drawings in the Lokalplan with shadows from towers in different seasons and different times of day show they were concerned back then about shadows but that doesn't seem to have meant many changes.

There are some good buildings …. the apartment building by Praksis that looks over the J C Jacobsens Garden plays clever and interesting games with the brickwork and with the traditional form of a Copenhagen apartment building but this is for the Carlsberg Foundation and clearly an appropriate amount of money was invested so the consequence is a building with an appropriate quality in both its design and in its construction.

The Carlsberg redevelopment is an interesting social experiment …. with a new or, at least, a modified Copenhagen life style. How will Copenhageners cope with living so far above the streets and squares …. or are all these apartments for foreign investors and incomers?

The only saving grace is that people in this city are still incredibly respectful of their streets and public spaces … or at least if Copenhagen streets are compared with the rubbish and vandalism found in so many other densely-built and crowded cities. If the spaces around these apartment buildings become unloved and scruffy then, here on the hill, they really will have built today the ghettoes of tomorrow.

Lokalplan 432, Carlsberg II, December 2016
Carlsberg Byen

Surely, Bohr Tower, and the buildings around it, are contenders for an award as the ugliest new buildings in the city

then ……. and now

 

buildings that depend on insulation and cladding

 

Bygningspræmiering / Copenhagen Building Awards 2020

Winners of the Copenhagen Awards for Architecture for 2020 were announced on 29 April. 

These awards date from April 1902 when Copenhagen city council voted and agreed to make awards annually for "beautiful artistic designs for construction projects on the city's land."  

There had been discussions with the Association of Academic Architects about creating an award that recognised the best designs for new buildings in the city but, from the start, the city council understood the importance of the historic buildings in Copenhagen so one function of the awards was to encourage the design of new buildings of an appropriate quality to stand alongside those historic buildings. They went further and decided, from the outset, to consider awards for the restoration of existing buildings or to recognise improvements to the townscape that provided the best and most appropriate setting for those historic buildings.

Nor did the awards focus just on major and prestigious buildings but over the years they have also recognised the best private houses; new apartment buildings and commercial buildings; factories and schools in the city. 

For 2020, eight buildings or projects were nominated and of those, five have been recognised with an award and one of the five, Hotel Ottilia, was selected by public vote as an overall winner.

The Award-Winning City, Hans Helge Madsen and Otto Käszner
The Danish Architectural Press 2003


Hotel Ottilia, Bryggernes Plads, Carlsberg
Arkitema Architects and Christoffer Harlang

There are two old brewery buildings here - the malt 'magazine' by Vilhelm Dahlerup completed in 1881 and, at a right angle, a long building from 1969 by Sven Eske Kristensen called Storage Cellar 3, although it was actually a large warehouse on five levels. It is faced in brick but is perhaps best known for a series of large gold roundels or shields on the outside.

These have been retained on the east side towards a narrow lane but with new tall thin windows cut on either side. On the courtyard side, towards Bryggernes Plads, the roundels have been removed and replaced with large round windows.

The roof was rebuilt to create a new restaurant - a large glass box with extensive views over the city - although this has been done well and from the ground is not obvious as a large addition.


CPH Village, Refshalevej 161, Refshaleøen
Arcgency
landscape by Vandkunsten

Housing with accommodation for 164 students on land at the north end of the harbour that was a shipyard but this area will not be developed for around 10 years so that gives the housing a fixed but feasible life span.

There are two lines of housing … one along the wharf of a basin and the other in line behind and parallel to create a narrow street that is the main access point to the units, and provides some privacy for the residents, as the development as it is in a large and open public area. The street arrangement and also helps foster a stronger sense of community.

Former shipping containers are set as blocks of four, two on two, with narrow spaces or 'courtyards' or terraces between them and with staircases to the upper units but also providing semi-private outside space for plants or for sitting outside to overlook the street or the water.

Each container has a bedroom/sitting rooms at either end, with large windows and their own kitchen area, and with a lobby and shared shower/toilet at the centre. There is also a large community space in the development with a communal kitchen, a meeting area and a laundry.

Insulation and new facing have been applied on the outside so the interiors retain the corrugated metal of the container. The individual space is relatively small but there is a good ceiling height of 2.92 metres. All materials can be recycled but the design and finish is of a high quality so that the units could be relocated.

There is a strong sense of human scale and a strong expression of the ethics of sustainability. There is a swimming area at the inner end of the basin - so a clear and easy connection with the recreational use of the water and the Refshaleøen food market, breweries, restaurants and galleries are nearby.

CPH Village.jpeg

Klarahus Produktionskøkken, Agnes Henningsens Vej 1-3,
De Gamles By
Anders Jørgensen and Erik Arkitekter

De Gamles By is a large area of nursing homes and hospital facilities with substantial buildings in red brick that date from 1892 and onwards. It is north of the lakes in Copenhagen, with Fælledparken to the east and Nørrebro to the west.

This new building is an extension to one of the nursing homes with a new kitchen and dining room.

External walls are mainly glass so people can see in and patients can see out to help break down any sense of isolation from the community.

The striking feature is a deep band of vertical planting above the glass with a good contrast between the industrial form necessary for a working kitchen for a nursing home and natural planting for an element of texture where otherwise there would have been metal or plastic cladding. The planting resembles camouflage - in part to reduce the impact of a relatively large building but also to form an appropriate link to the gardens all round the site that are used by not only patients and staff but also by visitors and even, on sunny weekends by local people.

There are community gardens and a petting zoo just metres away and it is an important and now well-established principle for civic buildings such as schools, libraries and here a hospital to remove barriers between the facility and people living in this area.


Elefanthuset, Thit Jensens Vej 4, De Gamles By
Leth & Gori

Not far from the kitchen is a former chapel that is now an activity centre and meeting place for patients with cancer.

The exterior has been carefully restored and the interior is a mix of historic features but with a clear use of modern materials and a strong palette of colours with natural wood to create a functional and practical but warm and friendly space.

photographs of the interior from Leth and Gori


Grøndalsvængets Skole Rørsangervej 29
JJW Arkitekter

Grøndalsvångets School was designed by the architect Victor Nyebølle and dates from the 1920s.

The school is an unusually long but narrow brick building that faces south and is towards the back of a large rectangular plot that slopes up from the street to the school. The building is at the centre of a grid of streets and apartment buildings that date from the middle of the 20th century and are mostly of three or four floors. The new buildings are on either side of the plot and run down from the front of the existing school to the street to form a new, large courtyard where there had been temporary buildings and a more traditional playground. The new ranges include teaching rooms on the east side and a new gymnasium and music centre on the west side.

These new buildings have high-quality and carefully-designed brickwork with pitched roofs that run down to the main street front where there are gables and the façade sets forward and back to create a good and well-proportioned frontage on a human scale and with a good domestic or vernacular style that makes the school deliberately very much a part of the area.

 

 

note:

There is a page on the web site of Københavns Kommune - under Housing, Construction and Urban Life - about the Building Awards along with information (in Danish) about each of the buildings.

Copenhagen, World Capital of Architecture 2023

Back in 2017, Copenhagen was chosen to host the World Congress of Architects (UIA) in 2023 when 10,000 architects will meet in the city and when the theme will be “Sustainable Futures – Leave No One Behind.”

Recently, it was announced that also in 2023 Copenhagen will be the UNESCO World Capital of Architecture.

World Congress of Architecture 2023

another scheme for the cinema site

Another scheme has been submitted for the site of the Palads Teatret in Copenhagen.

This design, from the Bjarke Ingels Group, has a series of massive blocks that are stacked up but offset to follow the curve of the railway and of Hammerichsgade that together mark the west side of the site.

At the lower south end is what looks like an open amphitheatre that would step back and up from street level but it would face what is now a very busy road and would look across to a less-than-attractive block at the back of the Axelborg building.

At the north end of the proposed complex, these blocks would be stacked so high as to be as tall or taller than the tower of the SAS Royal Hotel nearby so - like the other scheme for a series of tower blocks bridging the trench of the railway - it would throw a deep shadow over streets and buildings to the west and north and would certainly dominate and interrupt the skyline from many parts of the historic city centre. Is the design really that good to be that intrusive?

The design of the exterior appears to be a stripped-down, simple and open white framework - a relatively elegant variation on international modern - but it could be anywhere - so it hardly seems to be site specific, apart from the curve, and, if it could be anywhere, then why not anywhere but here?

And there could be 12 cinema spaces within the building although that is hardly obvious from the exterior but then that is hardly surprising because the cinemas will be in the basement to free up valuable rental space where tenants will pay for their views out.

There is that overworked phrase about form following function in good design but it is still useful when turned the other way round because, in many situations, buildings are better when their function is reflected in their form. Cinemas now, since the arrival of the multiplex, are smaller and, in any case, cinemas, from their very function, have little relationship to the world outside once you are inside - detachment from the real world, some would argue, is a crucial part of going to the cinema - but this looks like an office block paying little more than lip service to being an entertainment complex.

In some locations this would not matter but here, just west of the city hall, the commercial life of the city has always existed alongside major venues for popular entertainment so this is or should be downtown offices alongside Times Square night life where the city made its money and spent it.

National Scala, a complex of restaurants and tea rooms and concert halls - the building that was on the site of what is now Axel Torv - closed in the 1950s but the amazing Cirkus building from 1886 survives across the square from the cinema site and, of course, Tivoli is just a block away.

Redevelopment of this site should be a reason for trying to not only revitalise the area but also to pull it together in a coherent way but, in the design shown here, this building would completely dominate the view from the entrance gates of the Tivoli gardens.

Surely there has to be a comprehensive development plan for this important but now rather vulnerable part of the city, that should re-establish the links between the fragmented areas of public space and should set parameters for what new buildings can or should be allowed, because each of the recent developments have gone their own way and that has meant destruction by an unrelenting attrition from developers.

 

what would be the view of the development from the entrance of Tivoli

 

the dotted line is the building line of Hammerichsgade extended across the trench of the railway tracks …. the one advantage of the other scheme - the development that would construct blocks across the trench - had this line as the back edge of a new public square with the 1930s building of the Vesterport suburban station at the centre and with all the new tower blocks in the wedge between that line and the Vandværksviadukten but with one large building beyond the viaduct.

the scheme from BIG respects the curve of Hammerichsgade on the west side but leaves a series of odd triangular spaces against the pavement - so undermining the line of the curve - and makes the line of Ved Vesterport the alignment of the entrance

the Almindelig Hospital on Amaliegade

Almindelig Hospital - the General Hospital - in Amaliegade that opened in 1769 and was demolished in 1896

the apartment building on the site was designed by the architect Ole Boye
note: the arch is a side entrance into the royal palace

In April 1769 a hospital or almshouse for the elderly and the poor opened on Amaliegade.

It was a massive building that could provide a home for 700 paupers … possibly then a third of the poor in the city. Of those in the hospital, some 200 were too sick to work but many provided an income for the hospital by spinning wool and flax.

What seems so amazing is not so much the scale of the building or even that this is clear evidence of a coherent policy for social care in the city in the 18th century but this new building was at the centre of the main street in Frederiksstaden - the 18th-century extension of the city northwards - and was just metres from the grand houses of what was, just thirty years later, to become the royal palace of Amalienborg.

Nor was it the only hospital in this part of the city for the much grander Frederiks Hospital, completed in 1758, was on the opposite side of the street. That building is now the home of Designmuseum Danmark.

By the 19th century some 1,200 people were crammed into the buildings of the General Hospital and when the cholera epidemic struck the city in 1853, over 500 of the patients in the hospital died within the first month.

That catastrophic loss of life led to the construction of a large new general hospital, with small wards around courtyards, that was built outside the city defences, close to the lakes, and the hospital in Amaliegade was demolished in 1896.

A large apartment building designed by Ole Boye was built on the plot.

 

the hospital was demolished in 1896

 

Holckenhus

Holckenhus is a large and prominent apartment building on HC Andersens Boulevard that is two blocks south of the city hall and opposite Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek.

It occupies a complete city block that is not square but is actually a distinct trapezium with it's narrowest front to HC Andersens Boulevard; a long north front to the relatively narrow but busy Stormgade; a main frontage to Vester Voldgade and the most important and best-known frontage to the public space of Dantes Plads.

The building was designed by the architect Philip Smidth who also designed several of the major buildings around the city hall and it stands over the site of one of the major bastions of the old city defences called Holck's Bastion and that gave the building its name.

This part of the defences was the last major section around the city to be dismantled - late in the 1880s. Work on the the apartment building started in 1891 and was completed in 1893. Work on the Glyptotek began in 1892 and was completed in 1896 and there are early photographs that shows open ground beyond the gallery and the apartment buildings where the land there was being claimed from the sea.

The apartment building has upper floors in red brick with architectural features - including window architraves and quoins that form pilasters at the corners - in pale stone or cement and over a rusticated stone base but the most distinct feature is the steeply-pitched mansard roofs with dormer windows over what are marked out with quoins to be corner towers along with raised roofs over the sections or pavilions at the centre of each long frontage.

One source of inspiration for the design is clearly the architecture of chateaux and urban palaces in France from the 16th and 17th centuries so the style is generally described as French Renaissance although there is also a strong link to Danish architecture of the 17th century.

There were shops or commercial properties at street level with a lower-height mezzanine above and the most important apartments were on the second floor with balconies to the windows at that level with stone balustrades.

Inventories show that NA Scioldann, the builder of the apartments, lived in a large apartment in the building and he is credited with encouraging artists to move here to studios at the upper level.

A census of 1895, records that the prominent artist PS Kroyer had an apartment in Holckenhus, where he lived with is wife Marie Kroyer and three maids and a nurse for their new-born daughter, and the painters Agnes Slott-Møller and Emil Nolder are also known to have lived in the building.

Controversies over the future of Holckenshus aired in newspapers through last summer after the property was acquire by Blackstone - an American private equity fund - and there were reports that in their work to ‘upgrade’ the building, stained glass on staircases has been removed and high-quality and original woodwork on doors and staircases have been painted over but with details now picked out in gold.

However, the controversial and contentious proposal from Blackstone is to raise the roof between the towers to create eight luxury penthouse apartments. Clearly, the corner turrets and the central pavilions on each of the long facades is the key feature of the design of the exterior and a common roof line would undermine and change fundamentally the original concept.

The building is a major Danish cultural assets and not just the external appearance, in such a prominent position, should be preserved but features of the original interior have to be protected.

An article in Jyllands-Posten on 28 August 2019 Historisk bygning har huset Krøyer og andre store kunstnere: Renovering møder kritik by Ronja Melander has photographs of the interior and the web site of the Museum of Copenhagen has an article on the building and its occupants - Holckenhus - en beboelsesejendom med kunstneratelierer

Holckenhus has been added to the time line for apartment buildings on the site Copenhagen by design

 

the Boulevard in 1897 with the corner turrets of Holckenhus just visible (centre left) with the newly-completed Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek

 

the Hirschsprung cigar shop on Gammeltorv

The building on the west side of Gammeltorv, at the corner of Frederiksberggade, is under scaffolding and there is clearly a major restoration in progress.

The building, designed by the architect Johan Schrøder, dates from 1899 and has frontages to the square itself and to Frederikdberggade - although the street is better known as Strøget or The Walking Street.

Gammeltorv is a strange irregular shape with the building line on this side cutting back to the north-west corner so, although the building is more-easily described as L-shaped around two sides of an internal courtyard but, when seen from the air, the two ranges form a broad V shape.

In part for this reason, so to mask or disguise the angle, but also, presumably, because Schrøder understood the importance of the corner site, the corner of the building is rounded. That round shape is cut back in to form what is almost two-thirds of a rounded turret and that is emphasised with an order of attached pillars in dark stone at an upper level and by a prominent and ornate copper dome.

The main frontage is to the square with an elaborate stone doorway at the centre, with balconies above, but there is also a good frontage to Frederiksberggade and again with a central doorway but with a simpler surround with a pediment. These doorways gave access to apartments above but, from the start, there appear to have been shops on the ground floor to both the square and to the street.

The most important of these shops was at the corner with its entrance on the corner at the base of the turret. This was a cigar and tobacco shop owned by Hirschsprung & Sons and had a significant interior that was designed by Povl Baumann and Kaare Klint that was installed in 1916-1917.

That interior won an important City Architecture award in 1918 but very little survives … even internal walls have been removed to incorporate the space into adjoining shop units.

Will DESIGNGROUP Architects, responsible for the design work for renovation of the building, create something more appropriate with their refurbishment? They were the design team responsible for restoration of the building immediately opposite, on the other side of Frederiksberggade, so together these buildings form the entrance to the west part of Strøget and this could mark the start of a significant and overdue improvement to this section of what is a major street.

earlier post on the cigar shop June 2018

DESIGNGROUP ARCHITECTS

the building from Gammeltorv

Frederiksberggade or Strøget - The Walking Street - cuts across east to west between Gammeltorv - with it’s ornate fountain - and Nytorv with the 18th-century city hall on the west (here left) side.

the Hirschsprung building is on the west (left) side of Gammeltorv and on the north side of Strøget forming a V-shaped building with an ornate green copper dome on the corner.

scaffolding around the building has heavy tarpaulins that are printed with interesting historic images from the collection of Copenhagen Museum … here a view of the building from Nytorv with Gammeltorv beyond and taken before the buildings on the south side of Frederiksberggade were rebuilt.