Denmark
63 galleries
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25 images"Your Rainbow Panorama", a Rainbow-coloured glass walkway on the roof of the Danish art museum ARoS Aarhus Kuntsmuseum, by Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson. The permanent piece consists of a 150-metre-long and three-metre-wide self-contained circular walkway with glass that moves through all of the colours of the spectrum. The 52-metre-diameter walkway "floats" 3.5 metres above the roof and stretches like a multi-coloured halo -- supported by 12 slender columns. The piece opened to the public on 28 May, 2011. In order to access the walkway, visitors can take stairs or a lift from the museum in order to appreciate a panoramic view tinted in different colours.
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51 imagesA dynamic new hub for Art and Culture will emerge out of a synergy between landscape and historical freight train warehouses in Denmark's second largest city, Aarhus. The Cultural Production Center in 'Godsbanen' or the former railyards, will be a landscaped spatiality which creates an overall fresh and new identity within an historical framework. From a workplace connected with the railway, the 'Godsbane' development will become a living area of the city with activity and traffic flow during most of the day. The new cultural center will create an inspiring environment, stimulating the artistic production of primarily scenography, visual arts and literature. At the same time, the center will create the framework for a multi-disciplinary interaction between the artistic métiers, business and education. The transformation of the 'Godsbane' development places weight on the protection of character imbued by the area's industrial roots, while contributing a new raw quality that plays up to the historical framework. The workshops and Music Café are placed in the existing halls, while the new rooms and auditoria shall be gathered under a large roof surface. It is precisely this roof surface that defines the meeting point between the existing freight train warehouses and the railyards - creating a common architectural expression. The roof extends a soft, green line that draws in nature and creates a green movement from the Å valley inwards - and out again. In that manner, the project opens many access points and creates new life across both the whole area and the whole city. information from 3XN Architects
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1 imageBoy (2000), fibreglass, resin, silicone - a 5-metre-tall sculpture of a boy, crouching by Ron Mueck (born 1958) is an Australian hyperrealist sculptor working in the United Kingdom. Photographed here in AroS Denmark with a boy looking on. First shown in the UK Millennium Dome exhibition. It is now owned by the art museum ARoS in the city of Aarhus, Denmark, who use it as a trademark piece.
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35 imagesImages from British mountaineering expedition to Knud Rasmussens Land, East Greenland, Arctic, 2006.
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2 imagesAarhus City Hall, Clock Tower at night, Denmark. Built 1941. Architect: Arne Jacobsen and Erik Møller.
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39 imagesHothouse at the Botanical Gardens, Aarhus, Denmark. Architect: C. F. Møller. Engineer: Søren Jensen
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62 imagesArchitect: Nord Architects Copenhagen. Engineer: Søren Jensen.
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51 imagesRøde Kors (Danish Red Cross), Copenhagen. Architect: COBE. Engineer: Søren Jensen
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43 imagesKu.Be House of Culture and Movement, Copenhagen, Denmark. Architects: MVRDV, Adept. Engineers: Søren Jensen. Built 2016.
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44 imagesTingbjerg Library and Culture House, Copenhagen, Denmark. Built 2018. Engineer: Søren Jensen. Architect: COBE.
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7 galleriesArchitect: E + N, Engineer: Søren Jensen 1895 Architect, Sophus Frederik Kühnel
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70 imagesArchitect: Årstiderne Arkitekter Engineer: Søren Jensen Opened 31 July 2017 The football stadium is home to Silkeborg IF and has capacity for 10,000 spectators.
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54 imagesSeptember 2018. Architect: VMB Arkitekter, Engineer: Søren Jensen.
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