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For a few hundred years, virtually no foreign architects had worked in Copenhagen, but since the turn of the millennium the city and its immediate surroundings have seen buildings and projects designed by top international architects. At the same time, a number of Danish architects have achieved success in Copenhagen and abroad. Copenhagen's ...
Nyhavn 22 is an 18th-century building overlooking the Nyhavn Canal in central Copenhagen, Denmark. In 1949, it was acquired by neighboring Hotel Bethel and used for an extension of the hotel. In the mid-19th century, it was owned by the businessman Mathias Wilheæl Saas.
In collaboration with the landscape architect Sven-Ingvar Andersson, his firm drew up a plan for a completely new urban development in Gullestrup near Herning. Bredsdorff's most influential period was from 1947 to 1955 when he was involved in planning urban developments for the city of Copenhagen and for Copenhagen Municipality. [3]
Architect The Black Diamond: Indre By: 1999 Schmidt hammer lassen: Danish Jewish Museum: Indre By: 2004 Daniel Libeskind: VM Houses: Ørestad: 2005 Bjarke Ingels/Julien de Smedt: Gemini Residence: Islands Brygge: 2005 MVRDV: Copenhagen Opera House: Holmen: 2005 Henning Larsen: Tietgenkollegiet: Ørestad: 2006 Lundgaard & Tranberg: Royal ...
Principal architect 3XN: Copenhagen ... Copenhagen, New York City ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
Published as a single quarto volume, Hafnia Hodierna contains 110 plates. It provides important contemporary descriptions, engraved views, and architectural plans of all the principal buildings in Copenhagen, including the three Royal Palaces, other government and public buildings, the townhouses of the aristocracy, and the city's numerous churches.
Architecture in Copenhagen by period or style (9 C) Buildings and structures in Copenhagen by type (28 C) Listed buildings and structures in Copenhagen (7 C, 68 P)
In 1911, Strandgade 24 was acquired by H. P. Wittenkamp. The Wittenkamp family operated the bakery under the name H. P. Wittenkamp & Søn until the 1970s. The architects H. Christiansen and Jens Ladegaard undertook a renovation of the building in 1988–1989 which received an award from the City of Copenhagen.