Wednesday 14 February 2018

외환 kongens nytorv


Magasin du Nord, Kongens Nytorv.


코펜하겐, 덴마크 1095.


Magasin du Nord, Kongens Nytorv의 맥주.


앰뷸런스 4/5 서비스 3/10 선택 7/15 음식 없음 해당 사항 없음 12/20.


앰뷸런스 2/5 서비스 4/10 선택 6/15 음식 해당 없음 값 5/10 OVERALL 12/20.


앰뷸런스 3/5 서비스 5/10 선택 9/15 음식 해당 없음 값 6/10 OVERALL 13/20.


앰뷸런스 3/5 서비스 5/10 선택 7/15 음식 없음 해당 사항 없음 12/20.


앰뷸런스 4/5 서비스 5/10 선택 6/15 음식 해당 없음 값 6/10 전반적인 9/20.


앰뷸런스 3/5 서비스 6/10 선택 9/15 음식 10/10 값 5/10 전반적인 12/20.


앰뷸런스 3/5 서비스 4/10 선택 11/15 음식 해당 없음 값 6/10 OVERALL 13/20.


앰비언스 4/5 서비스 3/10 선택 12/15 식품 없음 값 7/10 전반 15/20.


앰뷸런스 3/5 서비스 7/10 선택 8/15 음식 해당 없음 값 5/10 OVERALL 12/20.


앰뷸런스 4/5 서비스 6/10 선택 8/15 식품 없음 8/10 전체 12/20.


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코펜하겐.


코펜하겐 (덴마크 : 코펜하겐) [66]은 덴마크의 수도이며, 백만 달러의 덴마크 인구가 집으로 전화합니다. 이 "타운의 친절한 늙은 소녀"는 쇼핑, 문화 및 유흥 생활의 탁월함을 갖춘 대도시가 될만큼 충분히 크지 만 여전히 친밀하고 안전하며 이동하기에 충분히 작습니다. 불과 몇 분 거리에 스웨덴과의 Öresund 해협이 내려다 보이는이 곳은 유럽 본토와 스칸디나비아의 문화 및 지리적 링크입니다. 이것은 오래된 동화가 화려한 새로운 건축술 및 세계적인 디자인과 섞이는 곳이다; 따뜻한 재즈와 코펜하겐의 지하실에서 온 차가운 일렉트로니카가 섞여 있습니다. 하루 만에 모든 것을 보았을 것입니다. 그러나 몇 달 동안 계속 발견 할 수 있습니다.


지구 편집.


고속도로를 이용하여 도시에 들어오는 경우 "코펜하겐"(코펜하겐)이라는 도시 제한 표지를 만나지 않을 것입니다. 대신에 "Storkøbenhavn"이 보일 것입니다. 이것은 더 큰 코펜하겐을 의미합니다. 코펜하겐의 원래 부분은 60,000 명의 주민이 살고있는 작은 자치구로 구성된 아일랜드와 암거 사이의 수로로 좁은 지역에 위치하고 있지만 코펜하겐은 2 차 세계 대전 이후 손가락 계획이 시행 된 이후 다른 도시로 확장되었습니다. 오늘날 이들은 특유의 지방 자치 단체로서 약 200 만 주민과 함께 도시의 대도시를 구성하고 있습니다. 주목할만한 예외는 Frederiksberg, 코펜하겐 내부에 자체 시장 및 시의회가있는 독립 자치 단체입니다. 코펜하겐 안팎의 다른 보로는 다음과 같습니다 :


다운타운, 중세 도시 - 많은 이름의 장소이지만, 교회 첨탑, 역사적인 건물, 좁은 골목길 및 훌륭한 쇼핑 장소가 줄 지어있는 코펜하겐의 역사적인 중심지입니다.


원래 300 년 전에 노동자 계급의 이웃으로 자리 잡았던이 곳은 지금은 많은 운하에서 주목할만한 번성 지역입니다. Christians의 프리 타운 (Freetown of Christiania)은 Christianshavn의 동부 지역에 위치하고 있으며, 오래된 해군과 함께 유행했습니다 : Holmen.


이 지역은 최근 몇 년 동안 괄목할만한 발전을 거듭했으며 현재 주요 동맥 인 Istedgade에 카페와 바가 점재하면서 가장 살기 좋은 곳 중 하나입니다.


Frederiksberg 성 주변에 원래 형성된 작은 마을 인이 지역은 여전히 ​​독립적 인 자치체입니다. 문자 그대로 코펜하겐시에 둘러싸인이 곳은 독특하고 보수적이며 고급스런 느낌을 보존하고 있습니다.


코펜하겐에서 가장 활기찬 곳 중 하나, 특히 주요 동맥을 따라, Nørrebrogade, 이민자, 학생 및 원래의 노동 계급 Nørrebro 주민이 섞여 있음.


Nørrebro 및 Vesterbro보다 생동감이 적으며 Frederiksberg보다 기이하지 않은 아늑한 동네 중심지입니다. 그것은 유명한 작은 인어 동상, 아름답게 보존 된 Kastellet 성채, 그리고 작은 페리와 대형 크루즈 선박에 대한 수많은 부두의 고향입니다. 기차 트랙의 서쪽 지역은 어린 자녀를 둔 젊은 가족들 사이에서 매우 인기가있었습니다.


일단 노동 계급의 요새 인이 섬은 독특한 분위기로 새로운 발전으로 급성장하고 있습니다. 코펜하겐 공항의 본거지이며, 카스트 럽 (Kastrup) 마을에 위치하고 카스트 ​​롭 공항 (Kastrup Airport)으로 명명되었습니다.


이 초록색 교외 지역과 세계에서 가장 오래된 놀이 공원 인 Dyrehavsbakken을 방문하십시오. Frilandsmuseet - 세계에서 가장 큰 야외 박물관. 또는 밀 강을 따라 카누를 타면 이것이 전혀 다른 종류의 교외라는 사실을 의심 할 여지가 없습니다. 종종 구석 구석 주민들 때문에 "위스키 벨트"로 현지인들에게 구어체로 알려져 있습니다.


도시의 서쪽과 남쪽의 교외에는 좋은 Arken 미술관을 제외한 관광 명소가 없으며, 좋은 해변과 캠핑의 기회가 있습니다.


편집 이해.


기록 편집.


11 세기에 코펜하겐에 들렀다면 조용하고 작은 어촌 마을을 돌아 보았을 것입니다. 마을 주변의 초원에서 신선한 푸른 잔디를 씹는 동안 게으른 가축 무리가 당신을 응시하고 있습니다. 동쪽을 보시면 혹독한 날씨에서 작은 어항을 보호하는 작은 섬이 보일 것입니다. 정말로 도시를 발견 할 최악의 장소는 아닙니다. 최초의 서면 계산서는 12 세기에 수크레 그라 마티 쿠스 (Saxo Grammaticus)라고하는 수염 맺은 점원 (또는 유명한 역사 학자)이 그 장소에 대해 몇 줄을 그린 때부터 나온 것입니다. Portus Mercatorum, 그는 그것을 상선의 항구 또는 시간의 덴마크어로 의미하는 Købmannahavn이라고 불렀습니다. 이것은 현대 덴마크어에서 København로 그 후 진화하고, 도시의 영국 이름은 그것의 낮은 독일 이름에서, Kopenhagen 적응시켰다.


서기 약 1160 년, 발데 마르 왕은 중세의 가장 다채로운 캐릭터 중 하나 인 압살 론 (Absalon)의 대주교에게 도시의 통제권을 넘겨주었습니다. 이 교회는 위대한 교회 성직자, 정치가 및 전사의 흥미 진진한 혼합이었습니다. Absalon은 왕의 통제하에 있지 않은 유일한 도시이기 때문에 오늘날 Slotsholmen (현존하는 의회에서 여전히 카타콤에서 볼 수있는 유물)에 성이 번성하고 성을 세운 것을 보았습니다. 그는 또한 종교인으로서 훌륭한 교회를 세웠으며, 필요한 것들을 돌보아 코펜하겐은 현재 덴마크의 가장 중요한 두 도시인 옛 왕실의 수도 로스 킬레 (Roskilde)와 룬드 (Lund)가 오늘날 스웨덴에서 자연스럽게 멈추는 중요한 역할을 수행했습니다. 중요한 Øresund 해협의 은행에 부러워하는 위치를 부여 받으면서, 그것은 천천히 그러나 꾸준히 오래되었던 도시 중심을 능가했다. 코펜하겐의 부상은 친구와 원수와의 기업 거래 및 로마 카톨릭 유럽의 대부분에 사순절을위한 소금에 절인 청어를 제공 한 번영 한 낚시 덕분에 크게 도움이되었습니다. 그러나 번영으로 부러워하고 코펜하겐을 따르는 몇 년 동안 한 때 독일의 한자 동맹 (Hanseatic League)이 도시를 완전히 파괴하고 낭비하고 약탈 당했다.


코펜하겐 (Copenhagen)에 대해 정말 멋진 점이 궁금하신 경우, 도시의 모토는 1952 년 영화 한스 크리스티안 앤더슨 (Hans Christian Andersen)의 Frank Loesser 노래 Wonderful Copenhagen에서 가져온 것입니다. 대니 케이 (Danny Kaye)의 노래로 상록수가되어 할리우드의 주목을받지 못했습니다. 그 도시는 그 이후로 계속 붙어 있습니다. 발음은 그대로 남아 있지만, 대니의 말을 듣지 마십시오. 코 - HAY-gehn koh-pehn-HAH-gehn.


그러나 불사조처럼, 코펜하겐은 재에서 반복적으로 일어났습니다. Danes가 종교 개혁 과정에서 로마 교황을 퇴진 시켰을 때, Roskilde는 로마 감독 단으로서의 중요성을 잃었고, 20 년 전에이 도시를 장악 한 후 왕은 그의 거주지를 코펜하겐으로 옮겼다. 새로운 수도가 다시 한번 낭비되는 것을보기가 대단히 열망하지는 않았지만 연속적인 왕들은 도시 주변에 막대한 요새를 세웠습니다. 도시의 많은 곳에서 여전히 볼 수있는 성벽뿐만 아니라 라운드 타워 및 증권 거래소와 같은 많은 현재의 랜드 마크를 포함하는 건물 난입에 착수 한 킹 기독교 IV보다 더 이상 없습니다. 그 후 코펜하겐은 스웨덴 사람들에 의해 포위되었고, 그 후 유명 인사들에게 폭격을 당했고, 코펜하겐에서 벌어진 두 번의 전투 중 하나 인 영국 넬슨 (Nelson)의 부통령 제독에 의해 거의 파괴되었다. 그는 " 폴리, 나는 단 하나의 눈을 가졌으며 때로는 눈이 멀어 질 수있는 권리가있다 "고 말했다. 그런 다음 망원경을 눈 멀게 내고"나는 정말로 신호가 보이지 않는다 "고 선전했다.


다시, 도시는 그것의 투쟁을 흔들었고 인구는 산업화 동안 급등했다. 콜레라 전염병이 거의 모든 사람들을 살해 할 훌륭한 일을했을 때, 왕은 마침내 장거리 대포가 그것의 구속 벽을 무의미하게 만들 것이라고 인정했고, 따라서 도시는 지금 구식 인 성벽 밖에서 자라날 수있었습니다. 그러나 코펜하겐은 유럽에서 가장 요새화 된 19 세기 후반의 도시로 새롭게 현대 요새화가 이루어지기까지는 오래 걸리지 않았습니다 (오늘날의 베스트 보던 (Vestvolden)이라고도 함).


제 2 차 세계 대전 중 또 다른 침공을당한 후, 요새화 된 도시에 대한 전체적인 생각은 창 밖으로 던져졌고 어느 곳에서나 가장 훌륭한 도시 계획의 사례 중 하나 인 손가락 계획으로 대체되었습니다. 코펜하겐은 세계에서 성장을위한 장기 계획을 수립하고 실제로 그것을 고수하는 몇 안되는 도시 중 하나입니다. 도심과 같은 손바닥으로 코펜하겐의지도 위에 손을 올려보십시오. 손가락 계획이라고 불리는 이유는 분명합니다. 부유 한 주민들이 모두 가난한 도시를 떠난 후 70 년대와 80 년대에이 나라의 웃음 거리가 됨에도 불구하고 요즘 방문은 피닉스가 다시 한 번 일어 났음을 증명할 것입니다.


오리엔테이션 편집.


코펜하겐은 뉴질랜드 섬의 동쪽 가장자리에 위치하고 있습니다. 도심부는 Vesterbro, Nrrebro 및 Østerbro와 서쪽의 Frederiksberg 및 Christianshavn 지구가있는 Amager의 섬으로 이루어져 있습니다.


기후 편집.


코펜하겐은 덴마크의 다른 지역과 마찬가지로 4 계절이 뚜렷합니다. 방문하기 가장 좋은시기는 5 월 초에서 8 월 말 따뜻한시기입니다. 현재의 일기 예보는 Danish Meteorological Institute 웹 사이트 [67]에서 확인할 수 있습니다.


스프링이 약간 위험 할 수는 있어도 아무도 알 수 없으므로 도시를 방문하는 가장 좋은 시간이 될 수 있습니다. 5 월 초에 보통 따뜻한 첫날, 지역 주민들이 최대 절전 모드에서 나와 도시 거리, 공원 및 야외 카페로 몰려 들고 삶의 진실 된 폭발로 쇠퇴하고 어두운 겨울이 마침내 끝났음을 안심 시켰습니다. 많은 지역 주민들이이 점을 올해 최고의 포인트로 생각합니다.


코펜하겐의 여름은 일반적으로 평균 기온이 20도 정도로 따뜻하고 6 월 21 일에는 18 시간의 절정에 이릅니다. 날씨가 너무 뜨거워지면 중앙 근처의 시원한 항구에서 무료 풀장에 뛰어들 수 있습니다. 코펜하겐의 항구는 종종 세계에서 가장 깨끗한 도시의 해안가로 간주됩니다. 코펜하겐의 연례 행사의 대부분은 6 월과 7 월에 열리 며 태양이 내 렸을 때 거리에는 항상 삶이 있습니다. 여름에해야 할 일 중 하나는 사이클링을 통해 해변으로 이동하여 아이스크림으로 태양을 즐기는 것입니다. 이 부분은 달리기, 걷기, 자전거 타기와 같은 대부분의 덴마크 사람들이 발목을 잡는시기입니다. 밤에는 친구와 가족들과 모닥불을 시작하는 것이 매우 일반적입니다. 이것은 데인 "hygge"의 한 형태입니다.


가을과 겨울은 도시에 큰 영향을 미칩니다. 대부분의 지역 주민들이 직장에서 집으로 직접 나가기 때문에 활기찬 여름 생활은 시들어지고 거리는 조용합니다. 이것은 hygge의 덴마크 개념이 자리 잡은 곳으로, 대략 cosiness로 번역됩니다. 짧은 어두운 날들을 다루는 지역적인 방법입니다. 친구와 가족은 가정 요리와 촛불로 조용한 음악으로 스테레오에서 서로를 방문합니다. 42 주째에 덴마크 인들은 가을 휴가를 보내고 문화의 밤과 같은 많은 행사가 열립니다. 겨울의 높이는 12 월입니다. 크리스마스는 거리, 상점, 사람들의 창문에서 조명과 장식을 통해 짧은 시일 내에 약간의 구호품을 가져옵니다. 티볼리는 크리스마스 시장에 문호를 열었고, 대부분의 덴마크 사람들은 일과 가족과 함께 덴마크의 전통적인 크리스마스 점심 식사와 함께 술을 마시고 있습니다. 12 월은 거의 모든 사람들이 후추와 사과 조각을 구입하는 달입니다.


사람들 편집.


현재 코펜하겐에는 약 60 만 명의 인구가 살고 있으며 그 중 80 %가 덴마크 출신이다. 인구의 15 % 가까이가 터키, 파키스탄, 이라크를 포함한 전 세계 20여 개국 출신의 이민자들 또는 최근 이민자들의 자손으로 구성되어 있습니다. 코펜하겐 사람들은 자유롭고 비 종교적 인 경향이 있습니다 (덴마크인의 24 %는 무신론자이고 많은 사람들은 일반적으로 종교 문제에 관심이 없습니다). 그리고 매우 전통적입니다. 일부 관광객은 (특히 겨울철에) 지역 주민들이 방문하는 것을 느낄 수도 있지만, 일반적으로 여행객들은 덴마크 사람들이 친절하고, 도움이되고 수용 가능한 것으로 느낍니다.


덴마크의 특별한 휴일을위한 축제는 물론 공통적이지만, 기독교 달력을 기반으로하는 축제와 축하도 일반적입니다. Fastelavn은 할로윈과 유사한 어린이 축제입니다. 아이들은 정장을하고 주위에 그릇을 가지고 음식물을 가득 채 웁니다. 많은 가정과 기업들이 5 월 4 일 2 차 세계 대전이 끝날 무렵 독일의 점령에서 덴마크의 해방을 축하하기 위해 창문에 양초를 놓습니다. 6 월에 St. John 's Eve는 가족과 식사를하고 도시 곳곳에서 모닥불에 참석하는 밤입니다. 12 월 한 달 동안 덴마크, 특히 코펜하겐에서 열리는 크리스마스에 전념합니다. 거리는 장식되어 있고 나무는 등불로 덮여 있으며 행사와 활동은 한 달 내내 진행됩니다.


감사와 감사는 일상 생활에서 코펜하겐에서 중요합니다. 세계에서 가장 좋은 비 영어권 인이라면 Danes와의 의사 소통에 많은 어려움이 없을 것입니다. 그러나 방문객들은 덴마크어로 몇 마디를 배우고 감사의 말을 전하고자합니다. 예를 들어, tak 및 mange tak는 감사 & amp; 많은 감사.


자전거 타기는 코펜하겐 문화의 필수적인 부분이기도합니다. 도시 주민의 절반 이상이 날씨에 관계없이 매일 자전거로 통근합니다. 이 도시는 수많은 시민 사회 개선 프로젝트를 다루었으며 이제는 세계에서 가장 자전거 친화적 인 도시 중 하나로 간주됩니다. 거의 모든 거리에는 별도의 사이클링 거리가 있습니다.


아마 가장 유명한 코펜하겐 주민들 중 한 명은 어린이 였을 때 많은 방문객에게 영향을 미쳤습니다. 한스 크리스티안 앤더슨 (Hans Christian Andersen)의 동화는 전 세계를 여행하며 진화하고 세계 문화에 흡수되었습니다. 10 대 때, Andersen은 코펜하겐으로 이사를갔습니다. 그는 코펜하겐에서 평생 동안 살았으며, 성취 할 수없는 여성들과 사랑에 빠졌고 결국 125 개 언어로 번역 될 이야기를 씁니다. H. C.에 헌신 된 여러 박물관이 있습니다. 코펜하겐의 안데르센.


다른 유명한 코펜하겐 인은 원자 구조와 양자 역학 분야에서 노벨 물리학상을 수상한 니힐 보어 (Niehls Bohr)와 실존주의의 할아버지로 알려진 소렌 키에르 케고르 (Soren Kierkegaard)를 포함합니다.


관광 정보 편집.


코펜하겐의 공식 여행사는 원더풀 코펜하겐입니다.


Copenhagen 바로 지금, Vesterbrogade 4A (티볼리의 주요 입구 건너편 중앙역 근처), ☎ +45 70 22 24 42 ([보호], 팩스 : 45 70 22 24 52), [1]. Jan-Apr M-F 오전 9 시부 터 오후 4시, 오전 9 시부 터 오후 2 시까 지; 5 월 -6 월 M-Sa 오전 9시 -6시; 7 월 -8 월 M-Sa 오전 9시 ~ 오후 8시, 수요일 오전 10시 ~ 오후 6시; Sep M-Sa 오전 9시 -6시; Oct-Dec M-F 오전 9시 ~ 오후 4시, 오전 9시 ~ 오후 2시. & # 160; 편집.


편집을하십시오.


비행기로 편집.


Amager의 Copenhagen 's Kastrup Airport (CPH)는 스칸디나비아에서 가장 큰 국제 항공사 인 SAS - Scandinavian Airlines의 허브입니다. 카스트 럽 공항은 지속적으로 디자인과 기능면에서 모두 높은 점수를받습니다. 이것은 런던 히드로 공항이나 프랑크푸르트 공항보다 훨씬 쾌적한 교통 수단이며 여러 항공사는 코펜하겐으로 직접 대륙 횡단 노선을 운항합니다. 에어 캐나다, 델타 항공, 이집트 항공, PIA, 카타르 항공, 태국 항공, 싱가포르 항공 및 유나이티드 항공. 그러나 피크 시간대에는 체크인 시간이 길어질 수 있으므로 여름에는 여분의 시간을 할당하십시오. 대기 시간을 줄이는 셀프 서비스 체크인 카운터를 사용할 수 있습니다.


많은 저렴한 항공사들이 공항까지 비행합니다. EasyJet [70]은 London Luton, London Gatwick, Edinburgh, Manchester, Milan, Geneva, Paris CDG, Hamburg 및 Berlin Schönefeld에서 코펜하겐을 섬기고 있습니다. Air Berlin [71]은 뒤셀도르프, 베를린 및 팔마 데 마요르카로 직행합니다. 노르웨이 항공은 오슬로, 헬싱키, 스톡홀름, 암스테르담, 부다페스트, 파리, 제네바, 비엔나 및 바르샤바에 (다른 항공사들과의) 예산 편성을 제공합니다.


Kastrup (Københavns Lufthavn, Kastrup Station)에서 시내 중심의 Central Station (Hovedbanegården, 약어 København H)까지가는 데 본선 열차로 12 분이 소요됩니다. 단일 구간 여행에는 36 Kr, 구입 시점부터는 75 분간 유효합니다. 기차표는 자동 판매기 또는 철도 플랫폼에서 터미널 3의 아트리움 안에있는 티켓 카운터에서 구입할 수 있습니다. 플랫폼과 터미널 3 사이에 리프트와 트랙볼이 있습니다.


코펜하겐 메트로 (Copenhagen Metro)는 카스트 러프 (Copstagen)와 코펜하겐 (Central Copenhagen)을 연결하며 낮에는 4 분 간격으로 밤에는 15 분마다 출발하는 기차를 타고 도심까지 14 분 (36.00 Kr의 티켓과 가격으로) 운행합니다. 코펜하겐시 또는 Frederiksberg에 가려면 지하철을 타야합니다. [코펜하겐 중앙역 또는 코펜하겐 서부 지역에 가려면 기차를 타는 것이 좋습니다.] 공항 지하철역은 터미널 3의 북단 끝에 있습니다 (승강장과 이동 통로를 열차 플랫폼에 전달하십시오. ) 터미널의 지붕으로 덮여있다. Kastrup이라는 이름의 또 다른 지하철역이 있습니다. Kastrup은 상대적으로 가까운 공항을 제외하고는 공항과 아무 관련이 없습니다.


자세한 내용은 Amager 소속의이 주제를 참조하십시오.


스웨덴 말뫼 (Malmö)의 Sturup Airport (MMX)도 고려하십시오. Malmö 중심에서 버스로 40 분, 기차로 코펜하겐 중앙역까지 30 분 거리입니다. Budapest, Gdansk, Katowice 및 Warszawa에서 Wizzair [74]와 일부 국내 항공사는 종종 다른 스웨덴 도시로 저렴한 항공편을 제공합니다. Gråhundbus (graahundbus. dk / 7-besk. htm)는 매일 Ryanair 일정과 일치하는 직행 버스 1 대를 운행합니다. 다른 항공사의 경우 (도착 시간과 출발 시간이 다른 경우) 다른 옵션은 p-airbus 및 neptunbus. dk / en입니다. Sturup에서 제공되는 대부분의 저비용 목적지가 Kastrup Airport에서도 이용 가능하므로 이전 가격을 고려하십시오.


기차로. 편집.


코펜하겐과 이웃 국가 간의 연결 고리는 빈번하고 우수합니다. 말뫼 (Malmö)와 룬트 (Lund) 및 예테보리 (Gothenburg)까지는 매 시간마다 몇 대의 열차가 운행됩니다. 평일에는 스톡홀름으로 매일 12 회 연결됩니다. Karlskrona와 Kalmar의 방향으로 더 많은 기차 서비스가 있습니다. 함부르크와 베를린까지 6 번 빠르게 연결됩니다.


덴마크 연결의 나머지 부분에서 빈번하고 수많은 있습니다. 유 틀란 트에서는 오르후스 / 올 보그 (Aruhus / Aalborg), 북서쪽의 스트 루어 (Struer), 서쪽의 에스비 에르 (Esbjerg), 남쪽의 프레데리 시아 (Sdernberg)에서 마침내시 간선 열차가 최대 4 회 익스프레스 (Express)와 인터 시티 (Intercity) 열차로 나누어 져 있으며 위대한 벨트 (Storebælt)를 건너기 전에 Funen을 가로 질러 운행합니다. 거기에서 그것은 코펜하겐의 중앙역에서 종결되기 전에 뉴질랜드의 길이에 걸쳐 도착한다. 좌석 예약없이 역방향으로 가려면 Fredericia에서 열차가 서로 다른 지점을 위해 부서 지기도합니다. 좌석 예약이 없으면 무작위로 마차를 타기 만하면됩니다. 코펜하겐. 모든 교차 벨트 열차는 DSB (Danish State Railways [75])에 의해 운행됩니다.


보른 홀름 (Bornholm) 섬에서 고속 페리가 승객을 스웨덴의 이스타 드 (Ystad)로 셔틀합니다. IC 보른 홀름 (Bornholm) 열차가 페리를 타고 승객을 코펜하겐 (Copenhagen)으로 최종 왕복 할 수 있도록 기다리고 있습니다. 전체 여행에는 약 3 시간이 걸리고 단방향 페리 / 기차 티켓 245 Kr 다시 설정됩니다.


스웨덴의 Øresund 해협을 가로 지르는 Øresundstog [76] 열차는 남부 스웨덴의 여러 도시에서 출발하며 룬드 (Lund)와 말뫼 (Malmö)를 경유하여 Øresund 고정 링크를 타고 코펜하겐까지갑니다. Malmö에서 중앙역까지의 소요 시간은 35 분이며 열차는 하루 종일 10 분마다 열리고 밤에는 1 시간마다 운행됩니다. 말뫼와 코펜하겐 간의 편도 티켓은 107 Kr입니다. Swedish Railways [77]는 스톡홀름에서 매일 최대 5 시간의 X2000 급행 열차를 운행합니다 (5 시간). 말뫼의 쉬운 변화는 그 숫자를 거의 두 배로 늘리고 야간 열차 연결 옵션을 제공합니다.


유럽 ​​대륙에는 독일 InterCityExpress (ICE) 및 덴마크의 EuroCity (EC) 열차가 함부르크와 코펜하겐을 하루 6 회 연결합니다. 베를린에서 매일 두 대의 기차가 운행됩니다. 기본 요금은 베를린에서 € 46, 함부르크에서 € 33입니다.


버스로 편집.


유 틀란 트와 코펜하겐 사이의 버스는 기차보다 약간 저렴하지만 M-Th를 제공하는 할인은 상당히 있습니다. 반면에 국제선은 열차보다 훨씬 저렴한 가격을 제공합니다. 그러나 정치적으로 우선 순위가 정해 졌기 때문에 코펜하겐은 여전히 ​​도시 간 버스 터미널이 부족합니다. 대부분의 국제선 버스는 센트럴 역 (보통 DGI-byen 옆)에서 멈추지 만 티켓을 구입할 때 정확한 위치를 확인하십시오. 국내 장거리 버스는 Vesterbro 지구의 Valby 역 근처 Toftegårds Plads에서 대부분 종료됩니다.


유 틀란 트 (Jutland) 버스 번호 888은 Copenhagen과 Aarhus 및 Aalborg를 하루에 여러 번 연결합니다. 알 보그 (Aalborg)에서 5 시간 15 분 거리입니다. 뉴질랜드에는 Holbæk과 Roskilde에서 추가적인 정류장이 있습니다. 라인 882는 매일 코펜하겐과 북서부 유 틀란 트에있는 Fjerritslev 사이를 운행합니다.


스칸디나비아의 링크는 열차에 비해 상당히 빈번하고 경제적입니다. 대부분의 버스는 중앙역의 ​​남쪽 고가에있는 DGI Byen에 도착하고 출발합니다. 승객은 일반적으로 티켓을 온라인으로 구매하도록 권장되지만, 중앙역 근처의 코펜하겐 오른쪽 Now 관광 안내 데스크에서 티켓을 구입할 수도 있습니다. 겨울 (12 월 -4 월)에서 Fjällexpressen [78]은 코펜하겐과 스웨덴 스키 리조트 사이에서 스키를 휘젓습니다. 온라인 예약시 코펜하겐이 스웨덴에서 Köpenhamn으로 불리는 것을 아는 것이 유용합니다.


225 Kr, 300 행. & # 160; 편집 Gråhundbus, [4]. Malmö와의 매일 연결이 매일 있고 Malmö 공항에서 매일 1 회 운행하는 현지 운영자 [Greyhound Bus]. 또한 유럽 다른 국가의 파트너와 협력합니다. Swebus Express, ☎ +46 0771-218 218 ([보호]), [5]를 편집하십시오. M-F 오전 8시 ~ 오후 6시, 오전 9시 ~ 오후 3시, 오전 9시 ~ 오후 6시. 오슬로 (9 시간) : 예테보리 (5 시간)


300 SEK, 라인 820; 스톡홀름 (9 시간) via Jonköping (4½ 시간)


유럽에는 Rødby에서 Puttgarden 또는 Gedser에서 Rostock으로 페리를 경유하는 매우 경쟁력있는 요금으로 독일에서 매일 매일 많은 연결을 제공하는 여러 버스 회사가 있습니다. 이러한 서비스의 대부분은 특히 베를린과 같은 동쪽 지점으로 향하면 가장 좋은 기차 연결보다 훨씬 빠릅니다. 이 버스의 대부분은 Ingerslevsgade에서 DGI 근처에서 멈 춥니 다.


Swebus Express, ☎ +45 80 70 33 00 ([보호]), [6]. M-F 오전 8시 ~ 오후 6시, 오전 9시 ~ 오후 3시, 오전 9시 ~ 오후 6시. 중앙 관광 안내소에서 판매되는 티켓. 이 회사에서는 자전거에 탑승 한 자전거를 허용하지 않습니다. 로스 토크 (4½ 시간) 경유 베를린 (7½ 시간)


450 SEK, 라인 902 & # 160; 편집 [79]. Berolina, ☎ +30 88568030 ([& # 160; 보호]), [7]. (Gråhundbus ☎ +45 44 68 44 00, [8] in Denmark) 티켓은 버스에서 판매되지만 사전 예약이 권장됩니다. 이 회사에서는 자전거에 탑승 한 자전거를 허용하지 않습니다. 베를린 (8 시간) : 로스 토크 (4 시간)


300 Kr (40 유로), E55 라인. & # 160; 편집 [80]. Eurolines, Halmtorvet 5, ☎ +45 33 88 70 00, [9]. 매일 오전 9시 ~ 오후 5시. 티켓은 사무실이나 온라인에서 판매되며, 함부르크에서는 암스테르담과 파리로 연결된 버스가 있습니다. 이 회사는 자전거에 탑승 한 자전거를 허용하지 않습니다 [10]. 덴마크에서 제공되는 대부분의 서비스에는 230v 플러그가 있으며 독일에서는 WiFi가 지원됩니다. 베를린 (7 시간)


300 Kr, 라인 260R; 함부르크 (6 시간) via Lübeck (5 시간)


300 Kr, 라인 210. & # 160; 보헤미안 라인 편집, ☎ +420 416 810 054 ([& # 160; 보호]), [11]. 매일 오전 8 시부 터 오후 8 시까 지. 베를린까지는 운영자 환영 자전거 만 사용하고 사전에 약간의 수수료를 지불하십시오. 프라하 (13 시간, 베를린을 경유하여 매주 두 번, 그리고 브르노로 향함)


300 BAM (150 유로) & # 160; Toptourist 편집, ☎ +45 48 25 38 37 ([보호]), [13]. 티켓은 버스에서 지불 할 수 있지만 사전 예약 및 지불을 권장합니다. 사라예보를 경유하는 사라예보 (주 2 회)


폴란드에서 출발하여 몇 가지 주간 정기 출발 버스가있는 여러 버스 회사가 있습니다. 불행히도 시장은 매우 유동적이며 경로와 운영자는 빠르게 변화하는 경향이 있습니다. 발트 버스 [81]를 그단스크 (25 분 30m)와 두 번 연결해보십시오. Agat [82]는 폴란드 남부에서 코펜하겐과 카토 비체 (20 시간) 사이에 주당 4 회 왕복을 제공하며, 바르샤바 (함부르크를 경유하여 20 시간)와 일주일에 한 번 연결하는 Eurobus [83]를 제공합니다. 이러한 회사 중 하나가 종료 된 경우 다른 사람이 트래픽을 인계받을 가능성이 있기 때문에 대안 검색을 시도하십시오.


페리 또는 유람선으로 편집하십시오.


코펜하겐과 노르웨이 오슬로 간 페리 (매일 16 시간, DFDS [84]). 코펜하겐의 페리 선착장은 Østerbro 지구의 Nordhavn 역 근처에 있으며, 시내 중심의 터미널과 Kongens Nytorv 광장 사이를 운행하는 페리가있는 특별 셔틀 버스 (E20 노선)가 있습니다. 폴란드에있는 Świnoujście에 대한 이전 서비스는 최근 은퇴했지만, 코펜하겐에서 차로 약 1 시간 정도 걸리는 Ystad에서 페리를 탈 수 있습니다 (다리 통행료는 티켓에 포함되어 있음) 또는 4.59 PM IC 보른 홀름 기차로 가능합니다. DFDS Seaways는 더 이상 영국에서 덴마크까지 페리를 운항하지 않습니다.


자신의 돛 아래에 도착하면 코펜하겐에는 몇 개의 선착장이 있으며, 가장 큰 선착장은 Svanemøllehavnen [85]입니다. 방문자 지정 선착장은 없지만 녹색 표시가있는 선착장을 찾는 것은 거의 항상 가능합니다. 일일 비용 : 75-120 Kr.


코펜하겐은 발틱해와 노르웨이 피요르드를 여행하는 대형 유람선에 대한 매우 인기있는 항구이기도합니다. 백만 명 이상의 승객과 승무원이 해마다 코펜하겐을 방문합니다. 크루즈 선박은 일반적으로 Langelinie Pier 또는 Frihavnen (Freeport)의 코펜하겐 항구에 정박합니다. 둘 다 Little Mermaid 동상의 북쪽 Østerbro 지구 (Langelinie에서 도보로 약 10 분) 및 도심에서 북쪽으로 약 3 마일 떨어진 곳에 있습니다 (예 : Tivoli Gardens). 평일에는 대중 버스 # 26 (24 킬로미터)가 매 20 분마다 항만을 운행하며 시내까지는 약 40 분이 소요됩니다. 여기 코펜하겐으로가는 2012 년 유용한 가이드가 있습니다 [86].


편집하기.


두 개의 큰 허브는 센트럴 스테이션 (da : Hovedbanegården / København H)과 S - 기차, 시외 기차 및 버스, 그리고 Nørere Station 역과 S - 기차, 메트로, 지역 기차 및 버스가 있습니다. 기차, 버스 및 지하철을 이용한 여행은 journeyplanner. dk [87]를 통해 전자적으로 예약 할 수 있습니다.


티켓 및 존 시스템 편집.


코펜하겐 및 기타 지역의 모든 대중 교통은 구역 시스템에서 운영됩니다. 가장 작은 항공권은 성인 (20 세 미만의 어린이는 12 Kr)의 24 Kr 비용이며, 매표소, 자동 판매기 및 버스 운전사에게 구입할 수있는 2 개 구역 티켓입니다. AppStore와 Google Play에서 사용할 수있는 모바일 앱 "Mobilbillet Hoverstaden"에서 티켓을 구입할 수도 있습니다.


11 세 이하 어린이 2 명은 성인 1 명과 함께 무료로 여행 할 수 있습니다. 2 개 구역 티켓을 사용하면 티켓을 찍었거나 구입 한 지역의 코펜하겐 주변을 여행 할 수 있습니다 (따라서 출발 지역 주변에 더 큰 고리가 형성됨). 3 개 구역 티켓은 마찬가지로 시작 구역에서 두 개의 구역을 확장하는 링을 여행 할 수 있습니다. 2 구역 티켓은 타임 스탬프에서 1 시간 15 분 동안 유효하며 구입 한 추가 구역마다 15 분씩 증가합니다. 마지막 열차가 시작되기 전에 티켓이 유효한 시간 내에 모든 열차, 지하철, 버스 및 수상 버스간에 자유롭게 전환 할 수 있습니다.


단일 구역의 범위는 지하철에서 약 7 분 또는 버스에서 약 15 분으로 대략 변환 될 수 있지만 항상 스테이션에서 구역 맵을 확인하고 일부 스테이션은 다른 스테이션보다 구역 경계에 더 가깝습니다. 존 시스템이 방문자에게 복잡 할 수 있으므로 도움이 필요한지 현지인에게 질문하십시오. 야간 버스는 밤새 (오전 1 시부 터 오후 5 시까 지) 작동하며 티켓 가격은 낮과 같습니다.


1 ~ 4 구역 내에서 대중 교통을 무제한 사용하기 위해 시티 패스를 구입할 수도 있습니다. 가격은 24 시간 동안 80/40 Kr이고 72 시간 동안 200/100 Kr입니다 (성인 / 어린이) [88]. 130 Kr에서 시작. 또는 코펜하겐 카드 (Copenhagen Card) [89]를 사서 지역 전역으로 무료 교통편을 제공하고 박물관과 명소 60 곳을 무료로 이용할 수 있습니다. 카드는 24 시간 동안 229 Kr, 72 시간 동안 459 Kr가 소요됩니다. 일요일과 월요일에는 많은 박물관이 무료이거나 폐쇄되어 있으므로 그 당시의 카드는 가치가 떨어질 수 있습니다.


지역 열차, S-tog 및 Metro의 경우, 열차 탑승 전에 항공권을 구매해야합니다. 버스의 경우, 운전자에게서 티켓을 구입할 수 있습니다. 그렇지 않으면 기계 또는 앱에서 티켓을 구입할 수 있습니다. 유효한 티켓이없는 여행 벌금은 750 Kr (버스는 600 Kr)이며 티켓 컨트롤러는 S - 기차, 지역 기차 및 지하철 모두에서 공통적입니다. movia [90]에서 가격과 티켓에 관한 더 자세한 정보.


데인은 일반적으로 여행에 레지 셀롯 (Rejsekort) [91]을 사용합니다. 카드 비용은 DKK 80이며 카드를 사용하려면 카드에 크레딧을 추가해야합니다. 여행 할 때 여행 시작과 여행 모드를 전환 할 때마다 체크인하고 여정이 끝나면 체크 아웃해야합니다. 단일 항공권에 비해 여행 당 가격이 절감됩니다. 개인 소유주는 덴마크에 영구 주소가 필요하고 "Rejsekort 익명"은 주소 나 개인 정보가 필요하지 않습니다. 그것은 Rejsekort 기계 또는 공항 또는 코펜하겐 중앙역의 ​​발권 사무소에서 구입할 수 있습니다.


S-Tog 편집.


S - 열차 서비스 ([92], 덴마크어 전용, 스케줄 [93])는 도시의 대중 교통 시스템의 중추이며 독일 S-Bahn 네트워크 및 파리 RER 시스템과 매우 유사합니다. 뚜렷한 붉은 열차는 깨끗하고 현대적이며 무료 Wi-Fi를 갖추고 있습니다. 이 시스템은 이른 아침부터 늦은 밤까지 매일 10 분 간격으로 (M-F 6 AM-6PM) 그리고 이른 아침과 늦은 밤 늦게 20 분 간격으로 운행됩니다. In the weekends, the trains run once an hour at night (except the F-line which runs twice an hour at night) and some of the lines are extended. Since most lines join on a single railway line through the city centre, there are only a couple of minutes of waiting between each train in the inner districts. The F and C-lines are exceptions, the F line does a half loop outside the central area, with trains every five minutes throughout most of the day. The C-line is extended to Frederikssund during day time, but scaled back to Ballerup at other times. Loudspeaker announcements regarding S-trains are given in Danish and English.


By metro Edit.


The Copenhagen Metro [94] runs from Vanløse through the city centre and branches to either the new-town of Ørestad or to the airport. The Metro has no timetable and between Vanløse and Christianshavn trains run with a four minute interval (two minutes during peak hours). It runs nonstop at night with fifteen minute intervals. The trains run automatically and are without drivers, so the doors will close at a given time, even if all waiting passengers have not entered the train. Wait for the next train instead of trying to squeeze through in the last second.


By bus Edit.


While most locals opt for bikes, Copenhagen does have a fairly extensive and efficient bus network [95]. It can be troublesome, though, for visitors to figure out what line to take to their destination as there is little in the way of network maps available at bus stops and schedules rarely include the entire route. There are several types of bus available: regular buses are simply denoted by their number, A buses are the backbone of the city's bus network which consists of six different lines with frequent departures and stops. During the day time there are no schedules as buses depart every two to six minutes. Many stops do have a small electronic display showing how many minutes are left until the next bus arrives. S buses are long express services with few stops and extend far into the suburbs, usually across the radial suburban train network or along corridors with no rail service. They can also be useful between points in the centre as they are faster than other lines. E buses are express rush-hour services of little use to travellers as they mainly service commuters. One exception is line 20E which runs between the central square Kongens Nytorv and the DFDS (Oslo/Szczecin ferries) and cruise terminals. N buses are a network of ten bus lines operating at night between 1AM-5AM daily, when normal traffic is halted, and they are much more frequent at weekends.


For sightseeing the city has recently introduced a new line 11A (formerly CityCirkel ) bus [96], specially geared towards tourists. It runs a circle around the inner city stopping at many of the main attractions. The small eco-friendly electric buses runs every seven minutes (M-F 9AM-8PM, Sa 10AM-4PM, Su 11AM-3PM) and can be hailed whenever one passes by if there are green dots on the the curb. On streets with heavy traffic they also use regular bus stops. You use the same tickets as all other public buses and trains. CitySightseeing [97] runs three hop-on hop-off tours around the city (map) in open-top double-decker buses. The main line leaves every 30 minutes, while the two other lines depart every hour in high season (Jun-Aug). Outside the peak season, services are halved. The price is 150 Kr for a one day ticket or 220 Kr for a two day ticket which also includes the DFDS canal tour boats. Be aware that the competing Step-on-Step-off company [98] likewise runs London-style double-decker buses with tours of the city and the same overall concept as CitySightseeing buses (often from the same bus stops), but their reviews tend to be poor, and they are not recommended by the VisitCopenhagen tourist office.


By boat Edit.


Going on a canal tour of the inner harbour and canals is an excellent and easy way to see many of the city's attractions, and fortunately there are many options depending on your taste and preferences. DFDS Canal Tours operates both a unguided hop-on hop-off service, branded as the water bus, arranged into three circular trips at the northern, central and southern part of the inner harbour and canals. They also have three guided tours, either by a pre-recorded tape available in many languages, or live English & Danish commentary by a guide. Be forewarned though, after 75 minutes this can get a bit loud if you are not normally attracted to this sort of tourism. Netto-bådene offers a single fixed tour, but at a much lower price. Please note that services are scaled back considerably between October and mid-March. If you are visiting during winter, you might want to opt for DFDS' red guided tour, as it offers a heated, glass-roofed boat at this time of the year. Both companies offer starting points in either Nyhavn or Gammel Strand (opposite the parliament). A different option is the public harbour bus, which, while it doesn't enter the canals, is much faster and is an integrated part of the public transportation system using the same tickets as buses and trains.


DFDS Canal Tours , Nyhavn 3 , ☎ +45 32 96 30 00 ( [ protected] ), [14]. 9.30AM-8PM . Waterbus (unguided): Single 40 Kr, All day 60 Kr; Tour (guided): Single 60 Kr, All day 75 Kr. Various discounts available .  edit Netto-bådene , Heibergsgade (Nyhavn) , ☎ +45 32 54 41 02 , [15]. 10AM-5PM (7PM in July & August) . 40 Kr .  edit Movia , Customer centre at Rådhuspladen , ☎ +45 36 13 14 15 , [16]. 7AM-7PM . Uses public ticketing system .  edit.


An option you may want to consider is a Freedom ticket which for 220 Kr gives unlimited transportation for two days on both all the DFDS Canal Tour boats, as well as the double-decker sightseeing buses of Copenhagen City Sightseeing.


By bicycle Edit.


The fastest and most flexible way of seeing Copenhagen is on a bike. Forty percent of locals use their bike everyday and the city has been designed to cater for cyclists with separate bicycle lanes on most larger roads. Cyclists are often allowed to ride both ways in one-way streets. Be careful if you are not used to biking in a busy city as this is a common means of daily transportation and the locals drive fast and without room for much leeway. Don't expect to get a warning when someone wants to overtake you. Always keep to the right and look behind you before you overtake someone — otherwise you could cause some nasty accidents. While biking, do not be surprised if they naturally say hi to you, that's just how nice danes are.


As the city bikes can be a bit expensive, renting a bike is a good alternative and many hotels or bike shops rent out bikes. Companies that rent out bikes include Rent a Bike in Copenhagen, Baisikeli or Rent a Bike Copenhagen among many other bike repair shops. Another option to rent a bike is to use Donkey Republic, where you can book online a rental bike close to your location (usually located close to hotels and metro stations) and unlock the bike using bluetooth. To use these bikes, you will need wifi only to log in on their app or website to book the bike and at the end of the rental to end the rental.


The first, rather basic and inconvenient pioneering city bikes have just - as of early summer 2014 - been replaced by a second and advanced generation of white city bikes, with GPS and supplementary electronic power engine [99]. They cost DKK 25 per hour and located conveniently close to metro stations and major attractions. Official parking stations for these new city bikes can be found at the Rådhuspladsen/Town Hall Square, by the Forum metro station, by the Frederiksberg Have entrance at Frederiksberg Runddel, etc. etc. When you rent the bike and wish to park it, you will be able to search on the tablet attached to the bike where the closest parking station is.


By taxi Edit.


Taxis are abundant throughout the city and of a very high standard — usually a Mercedes or BMW. They are pricey though, and the wait to get one can be long on a Friday or Saturday night. You can hail a taxi on the street or call for one to come pick you up at a specific address at a specific time for a small extra fee (12-15 Kr). At crucial traffic junctures throughout the city, there are special areas where taxis hold in line to pick up customers. Except for a very long trip, it is not common (or recommended) to haggle about the price. If you wish to pay with a credit card, you must present it for the driver at the beginning of the trip. All taxis accept major international credit cards and most will accept Euro cash payment and some even list prices in Euros on the meter. Sometimes taxi drivers request you to withdraw money in an ATM when paying with card, this is mostly a scam to do the trip off-license.


Copenhagen Taxi companies.


Amager-Øbro Taxi (Central Copenhagen) +45 32 51 51 51 DanTaxi (Central Copenhagen) +45 70 25 25 25 Taxa 4x35 (Central Copenhagen) +45 35 35 35 35 Taxa Selandia (Southern suburbs) +45 70 10 66 66 Taxinord (Northern and western suburbs) +45 48 48 48 48.


Prices range 11-16 Kr per kilometre depending on the time of day and the meter flag-fall charge is 25 Kr. Generally you can trust taxis with both prices and the route taken. Because of the high flag-fall charge, it can be better financially for taxi drivers to have many trips rather than long trips, so it is therefore often in their own interest to take the shortest route.


Complete listings can be found in the appropriate district articles.


Entrance to most museums is free once a week, mainly on Wednesdays. You can always count on the principal attractions to be well signed in English and German and for these places to be generally geared towards tourists. A good tip to see whether a smaller museum caters to non-Danish speakers, is to check whether the website has an English section. If it does, this usually means the museum has at least some English information throughout its exhibitions. Of course if you have some interest in a particular subject, such museums can be interesting even if you don't understand the sign-postings. As Danes are usually fairly fluent in English, you can always try to ask staff if they could give you a brief tour.


If you are into the arts Copenhagen has a lot to offer and the natural starting point is a visit to the Danish National Gallery (Statens Museum for Kunst, free entry, complementary lockers, closed on Mondays) where you can feast your eyes on blockbusters from the likes of Rembrandt, Picasso, and Matisse. There are a number of paintings by Danish artists from the "Golden Age." For more classical art, visit Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek (adult 75 kr, 20 kr or €2 deposit for lockers). In addition to works by masters like Picasso, Leger, and Matisse, this spectacular building houses a large collection of classical statues and sculptures. The winter garden here is a beautiful place to rest your legs on a rainy day. Both of these museums are conveniently located in the centre, or Indre By area. Thorvaldsens Museum is dedicated to the 19th-century sculptor and the art of his days. He is buried in the courtyard. It has some interesting, colourful and unique interiors, dating from around 1844, by the architect M. G. Bindesbøll and his team. Don´t forget the lovely collection of paintings and the archaeological items and his preserved library upstairs. The museum is free on Wednesdays. Davids Samling (The David Collection) is an internationally renowned collection of Islamic art, with a bit of Danish treasures too. The entrance is free.


If you are hungry for even more classic art exhibitions, an excursion north of Copenhagen to the beautiful Ordrupgaard offers you a chance to enjoy Monet, Renoir, Degas, and Gauguin. There are several other options for classical paintings but if you are ready for a change, head south to the Arken Museum of Modern Art for a world class exhibition of contemporary art, mostly Scandinavian, as well as hugely popular temporary exhibitions. However the arguably best and most visited museum in Denmark is the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art located in northern Zealand with a panoramic view across the Øresund. The museum frames the sculpture park facing the sea and the interaction between art, nature and the museum architecture is quite unique. Louisiana is an international museum with a considerable collection of modern art, and hugely popular temporary exhibitions.


If you want to enjoy some local colour on an art tour, The Hirschsprung Collection in Østerbro features the top-of-the-pops of Danish artists, with a particular focus on the Skagen painters. For something quintessentially Danish, breeze through the wonderfully quirky sketches of the much-loved local personality Storm P at the aptly named Storm P museum on Frederiksberg.


Science & Natural history Edit.


If you want your vacation to be educational, or if you want to sneak some knowledge into the kids during the vacation, there are several options to consider. The best choice for kids is perhaps the hugely entertaining, and well renowned hands-on science museum, the Experimentarium north of Copenhagen. Another popular and well-renowned institution, is the Copenhagen Zoo on Frederiksberg, counting both among both the best and oldest zoos in Europe. If you prefer stationary animals, the Zoology museum on Østerbro offers a different perspective on the subject. Elsewhere on Østerbro, a little known attraction is a display of famous physicist Niels Bohr's study room , along with a setup of his experiments (but as this is not a museum, you should have more than passing interest in the subject to bother with them) . City Centre, the University of Copenhagen runs two adjacent science museums. The Geological museum where dinosaur fossils, moon rock, and glow in the dark minerals should spark some interest in the subject for even the most school-weary kid. The Botanical Gardens on the opposite side of the street is an excellent place for a stroll in the beautiful park, even if you are not botanically inclined, and the classical palm house is a nice place to relax if it is cold outside. In poor weather, Tycho Brahe Planetarium on Vesterbro is another option and is part planetarium with an interesting astronomy exhibition and part omnimax theatre where they usually screen science films. The aquarium Den Blå Planet (The Blue Planet) is a new place focusing on marine life, situated near the Kastrup metro station [100].


Architecture Edit.


An excellent start to any visit to Copenhagen is to climb the unique 7.5-turn helical corridor leading to the observation platform of Rundetårn (the Round tower), one of Copenhagen's most iconic buildings. It offers excellent views and is smack in the middle of the city. If that is not high enough for you head to Christianshavn for a climb up the circular stairs on the outside of the church spire of the Church of Our Saviour . It has always been regarded as something of a manhood test to climb up and touch the globe on the summit, nearly 100 metres up in the air. Now that you're in the area, head over to the opposite side of the street to Christiania , a self-governing community that has been squatting on an old naval area since the seventies. Their inventive, brightly coloured, home built houses are spectacular, as is the relaxed atmosphere, albeit with some problems related to the selling of mild drugs in one street, the "Pusher Street" (no photography allowed there!). However, Christiania is overall one of Copenhagen's most unique attractions. It is recommended to stroll away from the entrance area, such as along the northern moats parallel to Refshalevej and also across the Dyssebroen wooden bridge eastwards, to experience the rural aspects of the place. Due south of Christiania the old, crooked, brightly coloured buildings and soothing canals lined with masted ships make this an excellent place to continue a stroll. Other fine examples of architecture include the impressive City Hall (if visiting, check out the interiors, such as the small library. Also, the tower, Rådhustårnet, can be ascended at certain times of the day and has a great view). The massive dome of the Frederikskirken colloquially known as the Marble Church . This dome, with a span of 31 metres, is one of the largest in northern Europe. Both are in the Indre By area.


For real architecture buffs, the city's main claim to fame is the modernist architecture and its native masters. Jørn Utzon (of Sydney Opera House fame) and Son is behind a trio of buildings on Østerbro's northern harbour, known as the Paustian complex. There is a fine, but expensive restaurant in one of the buildings. You can enjoy Arne Jacobsen's work by either sleeping at, or taking in the atmosphere (and great views) of the top floor lounge bar at the Royal Hotel which is one of the very few tall buildings in the inner city. Alternatively, head a good deal north to Klampenborg S-train station and Bellavista , a residential complex and theatre near the Bellevue beach, where there is even a restaurant featuring his famous furniture and his name. Lastly Henning Larsen , famous for his iconic buildings in Riyadh, is behind Copenhagen's new Opera house overlooking the harbour in Christianshavn. The architect disagreed with the final realisation of the facade, though. From here you can also catch a view of Copenhagen's latest iconic contraption, the Royal library known to locals as the Black Diamond, after its shiny polished black granite walls. Interior vault fresco by Per Kirkeby, and a nice enclosed garden area towards the Christiansborg Slot palace.


For more recent development, consider checking out the neighbourhood Ørestad on the island of Amager south of Downtown Copenhagen. It is a relatively young and still developing area, boasting several outstanding award-winning architectural projects along with an exemplary urban design master plan. The neighborhood is well connected through the Metro/Bus system, making all buildings very easy to reach.


List of notable buildings:


-8 House by BIG (Vestamager St Metro) - Bjerget by BIG (Bella Center St Metro) - VM House by BIG (Bella Center St Metro) - Winghouse by Henning Larsen (Orestad St Metro) - Bella Center by 3XN (Bella Center St Metro) - Orestad Gymnasium by 3XN (Orestad St Metro) - Copenhagen Concert hall by Jean Nouvel (DR Byen St Metro)


History Edit.


Visit the Nationalmuseet in Indre By for many exhibits relating to Danish history, Viking weapons, Inuit costumes and stone age tools. If you want something more local, the Museum of Copenhagen in Vesterbro has exhibitions on the city's development since the middle ages. Another option is Frilandsmuseet in the northern suburbs of Lyngby — a huge and attractive open air museum with old buildings collected from all over the country. Or for a live version of old Denmark, you can visit the old town of the tiny fishing hamlet of Dragør on the southern tip of Amager with its fantastic old yellow buildings and cobblestone streets.


For something more off the beaten path, paddle up the small Mølleå river near Lyngby and next to Frilandsmuseet , through charming old eighteenth and nineteenth century mills [101], [102]. It is highly recommended to bring a rented bike from the city by train to Lyngby station and ride along the Mølleå river via Brede, Rådvad and Nymølle, all extremely pretty, towards the coast, the Dyrehaven park (mentioned right below), and finally Klampenborg train station [103].


Royal Copenhagen Edit.


The four identical classicist palaces of Amalienborg make up the main residence of the Danish royal family. The octagonal courtyard in the centre is open to the public and guarded by the ceremonial Royal Guard. The relief takes place every day at noon and is a highlight for any royalist visiting the city. There is also a small royal museum on the premises. Rosenborg Palace is a small but pretty renaissance palace, surrounded by the lovely King's Garden which is one of the most lively parks of the city. The palace both serves as a museum of Royal history and as a home for the crown jewels which are on display in the catacombs beneath the castle. A closed-off wing of Rosenborg serves as barracks for the Royal Guard, and every day a detachment marches through the Copenhagen city centre between Rosenborg and Amalienborg for the changing of the guard. Unusual for a well-founded democracy, the palace that houses the parliament, Christiansborg , is also a royal palace. It is usually possible to visit the Royal reception rooms, stables and the old court theatre here. For entertainment of royal stature, you can try to arrange tickets to watch a play in the beautiful Royal Theatre facing Kings New Square. All of these sights are in the inner city. If you are hungry for more, head north, where the park around Sorgenfri palace is open to the public, or have a picnic on the huge open plains in front of the Eremitage Palace in the Dyrehaven park which formerly served as the king's hunting castle.


Design Edit.


Denmark is world-famous for its design tradition, and while the term Danish design has been devalued over the years due to much misuse, it is still a world-recognised brand. The natural starting point is a visit to the Danish Design Center in Indre By, with temporary and permanent exhibitions, showrooms, and workshops relating to the world of Danish design, in a building designed by famous architect Henning Larsen . Not too far away, Design Museum Danmark , formerly known as Kunstindustrimuseet , is home to a nice collection relating to the study of design and its history in Denmark. Also in the same district, Royal Copenhagen runs a museum display of its famous porcelain from the early beginnings at its flagship store. Meanwhile Cisterne on Frederiksberg is an enticing museum showing modern glass art, in the intriguing catacomb like cisterns under a large park. Meldahls Smedie on Christianshavn is run by the Royal Danish school of architecture, which organises exhibitions including final projects from students of the school here.


Beach life Edit.


In the inner harbour, water quality has improved so much in recent years that it is possible to go for a swim from early June to late August in one of the two harbour baths: Copencabana on Vesterbro or Havnebadet at Island Brygge on Amager. When it is sunny these are packed with people from all walks of life enjoying the sunshine and taking a dip. The municipal administration has put a lot of money and effort into the facilities and this is an excellent opportunity for blending with the locals at their best.


If you fancy a proper beach, the closest are located at Charlottenlund Fort in Charlottenlund and the newly erected Amager Strandpark (The Lagoon), on Amager near metro stations Øresund, Amager Strandpark and Femøren. If the weather is not going your way, you can opt for DGI Byen [104] which is a leisure centre and excellent swimming pool near the central railway station or the Østerbro swimming pool, modelled after a Roman bath (on Østerbro).


Amusement parks Edit.


Amazingly, the two oldest functioning amusement parks in the world, with the two oldest roller coasters, are both located in Copenhagen and they are distinctively different. Bakken or Dyrehavsbakken is the older of the two, set in a beautiful beech forest near Klampenborg north of Copenhagen. This gives it a special atmosphere and it is a lot less touristy than its counterpart — Tivoli — which is located smack dab in the city centre in a beautiful park surrounding a lake.


Annual events Edit.


Crafts Fair [105] is held in August - thursday-saturday - every year outdoor at Frue Plads in central Copenhagen. The Crafts Fair has more than 130 exhibitors, all members of the Danish Arts and Crafts Association, showing unique and small series of handmade Arts and Crafts in all categories: ceramic, glass, jewellery, textile, mixed media. Copenhagen Fashion Week [106] is held in February and August. Copenhagen is fast emerging as a global fashion centre, with a host of both up-and-coming and already well established names. For two weeks each year more than 1,000 exhibitors and 50,000 guests come together and celebrate their accomplishments with lavish parties, catwalks at city landmarks, and three trade fairs. CPH:PIX ( Copenhagen International Film Festival ) [107] is a brand new film festival held in April and is the result of a merger between Copenhagen's two popular long running festivals — the Night Film Festival and the Copenhagen International Film Festival . It will feature 170 screenings competing for the grand prize of €50,000. International Workers Day on 1 May is a major event in Copenhagen. The main festivities are held in Fælledparken on Østerbro and they attract over 100,000 visitors in what has lately become a 50/50 mix of a gigantic party and a political rally with speeches, happenings, and concerts. Two travelling amusement parks also set up their gear for the day, one by the main entrance at Trianglen and one in the eastern part of the park. CPH Distortion [108] is held in the first week of June and is longest and wildest party you could ever go to. Over 60 parties in five days in each of the city districts, outdoors on the city streets and squares, in the clubs and three seriously huge parties. Over 32,000 people usually partying away between Wednesday and Sunday. Zulu Sommerbio [109] Held in July and August, Danish television station 'TV2 Zulu' plays open air films in various parks and squares of Copenhagen. There are movies in both Danish and English and they are free to watch. You can buy beer and popcorn. Copenhagen Jazzfestival [110] is held in early July and features ten days of jazz everywhere in Copenhagen — parks, cafes, clubs, and theatres. Usually a few headline acts are on the program but there are more than 800 concerts to choose from and the real attraction is often the obscure concerts you bump into randomly in a park or square somewhere in the city. Grøn Koncert [111] held in late July, is a one day music festival in Valby Parken near Åmarken station. It is a major event in Copenhagen with over 40,000 attending. There is usually an international headline act, along with several major Danish bands and the atmosphere is quite unique with people having picnics and beers on a huge field of grass in the park. Tickets are sold through Billetnet, both online and at post offices. Stella Polaris [112] held the first weekend in August, is a big, free, chill-out event in one of the city parks. Top international DJs spin chill-out tunes on the decks, while people are relaxing in the sun and drinking beer. The afterparty in one of the major clubs usually attracts some international headline acts. RAW [113] held in early August is Scandinavia's largest clubbing event. The organisers rightly pride themselves in carefully selecting high quality acts and more importantly the broad range of genres represented to make this an event with broad appeal to everyone in the Copenhagen nightlife scene. Strøm [114] also held in August is an annual electronic music festival, running in its third year. It is a gathering of the best promoters and vibrant venues Copenhagen has to offer, mixed up with events at squares, concert halls, or unusual locations throughout the city. Copenhagen Pride [115] A lavish LGBT parade. The week leading up to the parade is usually full of community events and parties. Count on the City Hall Square (Rådhuspladen) changing its name to Pride Square during the week and hosting live acts, concerts and debates. Night of Culture (Kulturnatten) [116] is held in mid-October, on the last Friday before the school holiday in week 42. You buy a badge for 70 Kr and get access to major museums, exhibitions, churches, libraries, schools, organisations, the parliament and other cultural attractions including some places that are not open to the public during the rest of the year. Open from 6PM to midnight. Attracts about 100,000 people. MIX Copenhagen - LGBT Film Festival [117] Held in Week 43, Ten days of LGBT cinema at its very best with more than 130 screenings of the world's best feature films, short films, and documentaries with LGBT relevance, culminating in a champagne party on the final day, when the best film of the year receives its award. J-dag On the first Friday of November, at 8:59 precisely, the Tuborg Christmas Beer is released and celebrated in town, with blue Christmas hats and Tuborg girls.


Learn Edit.


There are five universities in Copenhagen:


University of Copenhagen This is the largest university in Denmark. The university has a large selection of studies which are placed in eight different faculties. The faculties are located around the city and the main building is located in central Copenhagen. Technical University of Denmark This university teaches technical sciences and is located in the suburb Lyngby north of Copenhagen. IT University of Copenhagen This university teaches information technology studies and is located on Amager. Copenhagen Business School This university teaches business studies and is located in Frederiksberg. Aalborg University Copenhagen This university teaches programs within humanities, social science and engineering and is located in Sydhavn.


Strøget is one of the largest pedestrian malls in the world which links City Hall, Kongens Nytorv, and Nørreport station. Impeccably dressed locals breeze through high-end fashion and design stores when not zig-zagging through the hordes of tourists during the summer and Christmas seasons. Your fellow visitors can make it all feel rather touristy at times but if nothing else, it is great for people watching. If all this strange outdoor shopping takes you too far from your usual habitat, head for Magasin du Nord (on Kongens Nytorv) or Illums (on Amagertorv) for more familiar surroundings. There is even a real American style mall complete with a gargantuan parking lot out on Amager. Appropriately, it is called Fields .


If you would rather sample smaller and more personal stores, the quarter of narrow streets surrounding Strøget in the old city (colloquially known as Pisserenden and the The Latin Quarter ), has a fantastic, eclectic mix of shopping. This ranges from quirky century-old businesses to the ultra hip in a wide range of fields. It is also much less crowded than Strøget, though unfortunately no less expensive.


You can also try Vesterbrogade and Istedgade on Vesterbro, due west of the central station, although you'll need to go a few blocks before hotels/sex shops/Thai restaurants turn into more interesting territory. Right at the border of this area, Værnedamsvej and Tullinsgade are also good bets.


In Nørrebro, there has been a rapidly growing establishment of small independent craft shops and fashion boutiques the past few years. Especially Jægersborggade at the northern side of the churchyard "Assistens Kirkegården" is worth to pay a visit, if you are looking for the open studio craftsman peek, a shop that swaps dresses, or the latest work from danish illustrator rising stars. If you are looking for second-hand artifacts and antiques Ravnsborggade is well known for its huge number of antique stores that are excellent for bargain hunting. Close by Elmegade has a good mix of fashion boutiques.


Laws limit opening hours for most shops, officially to the benefit of the staff. The closing law ("Lukkeloven") has been liberalised in recent years. Most shops will close around 6PM on weekdays, some around 7-8 PM (mostly those at Strøget), and 2-4 PM on Saturdays. On Sundays, only some supermarkets tend to be open. For out-of-hours shopping also (apart from the ubiquitous 7-11 and small kiosks), shops at Central Station (offering books and CDs, camping gear, photographic equipment, cosmetics, gifts) are open until 8PM daily. Large shopping centres and department stores are open on Sundays about once a month (usually the first Sunday, right after everyone gets paid) and more often during peak sale periods. The immigrant-owned grocery stores on for example Nørrebrogade on Nørrebro also tend to be open until very late in the evening every day.


Flea markets Edit.


A flea market is usually called a Loppemarked in Danish.


Halmtorvet in the Vesterbro area, near the central station. Open on Saturdays in the summer season. Currently one of the places with a better-quality selection.


Frederiksberg Loppemarked on the square behind the Frederiksberg Rådhus town hall. Biggest in town, on Saturdays in the summer season, with a wide selection of varying quality.


Thorvaldsens Museum square and Kongens Nytorv square opposite the D´Angleterre Hotel also tend to have flea markets (at least on Saturdays) during the summer season, with better-quality items.


' Nørrebro Flea Market is Denmark's longest and narrowest. It stretches for 333 metres on one half of the sidewalk by the wall of the Assistens Cemetery on Nørrebrogade. Open from 4 April until 31 October on Saturdays 9:00 - 15:00. However most of the stands have become low-quality these days, like the flea market further outwards at Nørrebrogade, at the Nørrebro Station (Saturdays). Close to the Assistens Cemetery, Guldbergsgade also has a few flea market stands on Saturdays during the summer season.


The oldest flea market in Copenhagen is on Israels Plads , close to the Nørreport S-Train Station. However it is currently (2014) closed, due to renovation of the square, probably ending in 2015.


Please look for general restaurant listings in the appropriate districts.


On a budget Edit.


If your budget doesn't allow for regular dining at expensive Michelin restaurants, don't despair — there are plenty of other options. The cheapest are the many shawarma and pizza joints that you find on almost every street in the city. You can get a shawarma for as little as 15-20 Kr and pizzas start at around 40 Kr. You can opt for take away or sit at the one or two tables that are usually available. The cheapest places can be found around Istedgade on Vesterbro and Nørrebrogade on Nørrebro. For affordable and delicious pita kebab, try Ahaaa on Blågårds Plads, or Boys Shawarma & Is for dürüm kebab on Nørrebrogade 216. For the best kebab in the city go to Shawarma Grill House Frederiksberggade 36.


If shawarma gets a little tiring, there are several Mediterranean-style all-you-can eat buffet restaurants dotted around the inner city. Riz Raz is popular, with three locations and a huge vegetarian buffet for 69 Kr (lunch) / 99 Kr (dinner). The branch on St. Kannikestræde has an infallible ability to seat and feed groups of all sizes. Nearby, Ankara on Krystalgade offers a Turkish-inspired buffet that includes meat as well as salads. Nyhavns Faergekro at Nyhavn has an original herring buffet where you can eat as much herring as you like prepared in ten different ways (grilled and many different marinades).


Cocks & Cows, Friends & Brgrs, Max Burgers and much more reveal the crazy love Copenhagen nurtures for burgers. Affordable, the burgers are of good quality and can accommodate all needs: vegan and vegetarian diets as well as gluten allergies.


For breakfast and lunch try one of Copenhagen's bakeries ( Bager — look for a pretzel-like contraption out front). They are numerous and the quality is excellent. Many offer ready-made sandwiches (around 35 Kr) such as Denmark's famous open-faced rye bread sandwiches called smørrebrød . These sandwiches are small enough to take away and eat either with your hands or with a fork and knife and a wide range of ingredients are available including some elaborate combinations for the more adventurous. Most bakeries also offer coffee, bread rolls and cakes (expect to pay 8-10 Kr for Danish pastry, here known as wienerbrød ) and many bakeries offer at least some form of counter seating. Den Rene Brød is highly recommendable. You can also try Grød for a healthy start.


A must-try is Torvehallerne which is located right next to Nørreport station. What can best be described as a foodhall, it's a place where you can buy all kinds of flowers and groceries, or you can sit down and dine or have coffee and some cake. Much of the food there is local and typically danish, but there's also cuisine from around the world. For groceries, it's more expensive than going to the supermarket, but it's a great place to sample bits of food and you can buy a meal there that's not too expensive. It's a great place to buy lunch and then bring with you to one of the nearby parks, Kongens Have or H. C. Ørstedsparken, to eat.


Another must-try is Papirøen, located right across the bridge from Nyhavn. Papirøen gathers may street food stands in a hangar, where you can eat all kind of food you would wish: Danish, Italian, Indian, Chinese, French, Columbian. 그리고 훨씬 더.


For something quintessentially Danish, no visit to Copenhagen is complete without trying out a pølsevogn (see image on the right), literally "sausage wagon", where you can get your hands on several different forms of tasty hot dogs with a free selection of various toppings for next-to-nothing by local standards. Some are organic and are particularly prone to offer vegan options. It is also one of the few places where you are expected to socialise with the other guests. To blend in, remember to order a bottle of Cocio cocoa drink to wash down your hot dog. At night, when the wagons are put into storage, 7-11 stores (which are open 24/7) take over the business of satisfying your hot dog craving. They offer other eat-and-walk items like pizza slices or spring rolls.


Also, remember to look out for the term dagens ret on signs and menus — this means "meal of the day" and often translates to a filling plate of hot food for a reasonable price.


And finally, if your budget gets really small, buy some of your food in the supermarket. But watch out, prices can vary a lot depending on which supermarket you are going to. "Netto" (e. g. close to Nørrebro metro station), as well as Fakta and Rema 1000 are the ones you should look for. Irma, with a lot of fresh and delicious food, is (even for Danes) a little expensive.


Michelin dining Edit.


For a city of its size, Copenhagen has a good number of Michelin starred restaurants located mostly in the inner city. Noma and Ensemble offer rare and exciting Danish cuisine, while Kong Hans Kælder and restaurant MR are the places to go for fine French dining. In other districts, Frederiksberg is home of the French/Danish restaurant Formel B and far away in the Northern suburbs Søllerød Kro is a traditional inn also offering fine French dining.


Christianshavn is the home of the only starred Italian restaurant, Era Ora and Kiin Kiin on Nørrebro is a rare high class Thai restaurant. Finally, on Østerbro, Paustian's fusion and alchemist kitchen is an altogether different way of dining.


Brunch Edit.


Brunch is a Copenhagen institution, especially during the summer, and it is not unusual to hear a serious invitation for a morning brunch together with the ritual goodbye hug when a long night out in town draws to a close. In this way, brunch is intrinsically linked to the second local obsession of drinking. Food and fresh air is a great cure for hangovers as locals have long since discovered.


Most cafés offer brunch, at least on weekends, for upwards of 80 Kr. Particularly popular places for brunch include The Union Kitchen , on Store Strandstrade; Møller - Kaffe og Køkken - on Nørrebrogade; Kalaset on Verdersgade, between the lakes and Nørreport.


Sweet tooth Edit.


Drink Edit.


A large beer costs 30-40 Kr or so at most places in central Copenhagen, but some charge only 20-30 Kr, especially on weekdays or during early hours, while fancy places obviously charge more. Unless you come from elsewhere in Scandinavia don't frighten yourself by trying to work out what this costs in your home currency. At most places the beer on tap is either Carlsberg or Tuborg. In either case there will be a choice of the normal pilsner and then a slightly redder special or classic. Some might also offer wheat or dark beer.


If you are on a budget you could follow the example of local teenagers and get primed with bottled beer from a supermarket or kiosk (3-7 Kr for a 330 ml bottle). It is legal and very popular to drink beer in public (not on public transport, although it will be accepted if you are not showing drunk behaviour), so buy a beer, sit on a park bench or at Nyhavn and enjoy Danish life.


As for where to drink, most tourists head straight for Nyhavn but while indeed pretty, the high prices here make it a bit of a tourist trap. In good weather imitate the locals by buying beer from a kiosk and dangling your legs over the water or head elsewhere to get your drinking on. The many side streets north and south of the strøget pedestrian street are a good starting point. Other good areas are Vesterbro west of the central station, along Vesterbrogade and Istedgade and in the meatpacking district. On Nørrebro, the cluster of bars and clubs around Sankt Hans Torv and Blågårds Plads, just after the lakes , is another hotspot. For a coastal city Copenhagen has surprisingly few places where you can enjoy a water view with your beer or coffee, except from Papirøen .


If you're into cocktails, many addresses are of interest: Ruby for fancy cocktails. Bird & Churchkey for G&Ts. The Barking Dog, Strøm .


Cafés are equally ready to serve coffees or beer and wine but they usually close around midnight and music is subdued to allow for conversations. They also serve food. Bodegas are your average local watering holes, somewhat equivalent to a pub, with prices often much lower than bars and cafés. The clientèle is often a bit shady and you may have people staring at unfamiliar customers but behave nicely and they usually warm up to you. Try to have someone teach you the local træmand , meyer , or snyd dice games for a fun night. Pubs are just that, pubs, the familiar English, Irish, and Scottish-themed exports that often do not have much in common with the actual pubs in those countries other than exported beer and interiors. Bars are what locals tend to call everything with loud music that do not have a cover charge. Packed at weekends but more quiet at other times. Clubs , or discotheques as they are often still referred to here, are bars that have a cover charge and have a dance floor. Often only open Th-Sa. Morgenværtshus . If you can get away with pronouncing this when you'll need it, you will be asking directions to a shady establishment full of people hell bent on not ending the night just yet. They usually open around 5AM and "classics" include the 24 hour Hong Kong in Nyhavn, Café Guldregn on Vesterbro and Andy's in the city centre.


Clubbing Edit.


You can check for club listings in the various districts.


The club scene is vibrant in Copenhagen, but most clubs are only open Th-Sa. Note that most locals have a party at home with friends or frequent their favourite bars, before they head out for the clubs, so they rarely get going until after midnight and close around 5AM. Most clubs have a 40-80 Kr cover charge and the ones that don't are rubbish more often than not. Also expect an additional 10-20 Kr for cloakrooms. Most clubs maintain a minimum age of 20 or 21, although they are not required to do this by law. Expect a draft beer, or basic drinks, to set you back 40-50 Kr — a bit more than bars usually charge.


Visitors who want to indulge Su-W will probably have to hunt around to find a place with some action but there are some options:


Monday — The Scottish pub on Rådhuspladsen (City Hall) hosts a backpackers night, which is sometimes quite lively. Tuesday — Elektronisk Tirsdag ( Electronic Tuesday ) plays nice electronic tunes on Gefährlich on Nørrebro . Wednesday — You could go for the popular International Night [118] for resident exchange students on Stundenterhuset in Indre By. Thursday - Is tricky, there is no set place to go, but most bars will be open and often offer discounts on beers and cocktails and free entrance. Also concerts with bands of varying popularity at Nørrebro's Drone Bar and of course Rust [119] concert venue and nightclub as well as open mike nights at both branches of Cafe Retro [120](found in Nørrebro and Indre By). Lately Copenhagen has experienced an increased interest in Thursday clubbing, especially from the younger audience. To experience this, you can try places like Sport Club , MAZE or Jupiter Club , though beware that all of those places do have pickers, require you to dress fancy and are very expensive.


Gay and lesbian Edit.


For its size, Copenhagen has a rather large gay scene with a good handful of bars and dance clubs located in the centre of the city within walking distance from each other, some of the better ones include Club Christopher in Indre By. VELA, the only bar/lounge in town that is targeted at lesbians is on Vesterbro.


Live venues Edit.


Most of the music venues in Copenhagen also double as nightclubs so watch for them under the club sections in the different districts. Tickets for almost every event in Denmark and Copenhagen are sold through Billetnet [121] which has both online sales and a counter available in all post offices. But apart from headline events, tickets are usually also sold at the entrance. Expect to pay 100 Kr and upwards.


The major music venues in Copenhagen are Parken stadium on Østerbro for the biggest stars. Copenhagen/Indre_By, Copenhagen Jazzhouse obviously hosts Jazz concerts and The Rock is the spiritual home of the local rock and heavy metal scene. Vega on Vesterbro is a major venue with concerts of almost every genre by national and international acts. Nørrebro has two venues: Rust's stage mainly hosts mainstream rhythmic music and Global , as its name would imply, provides a stage for world music. Southwards on Christianshavn, it is no surprise that the.


Operahouse plays Opera and not to be missed, the different venues of Christiania are a powerhouse of Denmark's alternative and underground culture.


Sleep Edit.


Hotel listings are available in the appropriate districts.


Copenhagen offers all kinds of accommodation but like the rest of Denmark, prices are high. Most hotels are located in Indre By and Vesterbro. Special rates are often available on the internet or from travel agencies, so look around well ahead of time, rather than spending your holiday budget on sleeping because you booked at the last minute.


If you are looking for something unique, Copenhagen has a few surprisingly little known options. Fancy sleeping in an old fort? Then look no further than Flakfortet on its very own island out in the sound. Stylish rooms, classic and rather tastefully integrated into the environs of the old fort. Staying here does though exclude spending your evenings in the city, as the last ferry leaves in the late afternoon. You can also opt for the Dragør Fort on Amager although they haven't pulled it off quite so nicely. In the same area, consider the old and historic beach front Dragør Badehotel in a classic building with great views over Øresund and a nearby beach, but also a fair deal of transportation time to the sights in the city centre. (Although it is close to the airport.)


In the same genre, and with the same drawbacks, is Skovshoved Hotel in the northern suburbs. This is an historic beach hotel with nice views and a fantastic restaurant. You can get even closer to the water on the floating houseboat hotel CPH Living moored in Christianshavn . If you're a rad hipster and would rather sample some of the design for which the city is rightly famous, consider Hotel Fox where young Danish and international artists have individually decorated and furnished the rooms. Other hip options are Hotel Twentyseven and Skt Petri Hotel located near the arty cocktail lounges of the Indre By area. Or you could always max out your credit card and splurge at the timeless five star classics of D'Angleterre or Hotel Nyhavn .


On a budget Edit.


Copenhagen is an expensive city, but it is possible for budget travellers to find reasonably priced accommodations. For those on an ultra low budget there are two free, but completely basic, camping grounds along the Mølleå river where you can camp for one or two nights. While camping elsewhere is no big sin, it is not legal either. There are plenty of commercial camping grounds available but if you are not used to Scandinavian price ranges, even these could seem expensive (50-200 Kr). The closest camping sites are at Charlottenlund Fort in Charlottenlund and there is also a summer-only camping ground in the outer part of Nørrebro within the city proper. If you prefer modern comforts consider one of the hospitality exchange networks. Couchsurfing. org for instance, is quite popular with the Copenhagers, who provide 6,000 available hosted stays in the city, giving you the added bonus of having a local to point you to the great spots.


There are a few hostels available and the cheapest are two summer-only (July-Aug) hostels in Vesterbro: YMCA Interpoint and Sleep in fact . Here you can overnight in basic dormitory bunk beds from as little as 100 Kr. On Nørrebro the two sleep-in hostels are slightly more expensive but still a bargain compared to the general price range. The national hostel system Danhostel [122] which is part of Hostelling International, run four hostels within reasonable distance of the the centre, but they are not exactly party locations if that is what you are looking for.


For Hotels consider the Cab Inn [123] chain that has three hotels in Copenhagen. One is just a short walk away from Tivoli and Kobenhavn H and the other two are at Frederiksberg. Rooms go from €71 (single) to €103 (triples). The rooms are quite small but have TVs and private showers and toilets. For LGBT visitors, there are several cheap hotels catering specifically to the LGBT community — Carsten's Guest House [124] and Copenhagen Rainbow [125] are two of them. In the very city centre, just 500 metres from Tivoli on the mainstreet of Vesterbrogade there is a few other fairly priced options for accommodation, the Loeven hotel [126], the Savoy Hotel [127], prices around €80 for a twin room. A little further out following a side street on your left hand side, in Absalonsgade you will a youthhostel, also fairly priced although quite noisy.


Another on-the-rise alternative is to rent your own apartment, which can save you some money, especially if you are traveling as a group. People rent out their private homes through various websites and here you will be able to find a room or apartment for rent in all price ranges. It can be as cheap as staying in a hostel, but you get a fully equipped apartment that has authentic homely atmosphere.


Contact Edit.


Libraries offer free internet access for one hour at a time, though this often requires signing up in advance. The Hovedbilbiotek (main library) has 12 freely accessible workstations and a wide selection of international newspapers, Krystalgade 15 [128]


A cheap (under 20Kr/hour) internet café is in Copenhagen Central Station. Moreover, a lot of bars, cafés, McDonald's, and petrol stations offer WiFi hotspots for people with notebooks, though these are a little more expensive than internet cafés. OpenWiFi [129] maintains a list of hotspots in the city.


If you are travelling with your own laptop, you could also jump on a S-train , which all have free WiFi. But since you need to activate your account through an confirmation, it's a good idea to register beforehand, which can be done on the Gratis Danmark website [130].


The Tourist Information Office [131] is located near Copenhagen Main Station (2 mins walk) and is worth a visit. The staff are really friendly and they speak many languages. It is possible to book hotels using PC terminals directly from within this office and they provide information for all possible activities in Copenhagen including museums, concerts and festivals.


Money Edit.


Although Denmark is a member of the European Union, the currency is still the Danish Krone, which is pegged to the Euro at a rate of about 7.45 Kroner per Euro. In Copenhagen, Nyhavn, Tivoli, and many of the major restaurants and hotels frequented by tourists accept Swedish Kronor and Euros, although it is not yet common practice elsewhere. Banks are ubiquitous, so exchanging currencies will in most cases not present any major difficulties. Exchange offices are also becoming increasingly widespread, especially Scandinavian chains such as Forex and X-change, which often have decent rates and charge no commission unlike those on strøget which offer low rates and a very high commission. Using the exchange machines present at some banks is not recommended, though, as these charge a fee of 25 kroner (US$4.50 or €3.35).


Credit cards are widely accepted, although this is usually limited to Visa and/or Mastercard. Many supermarkets and small shops will normally only accept the widespread local Danish debit-card, also known as the Dankort. But acceptance of the two major international credit cards is increasing rapidly. Other credit cards like American Express, Diners, JCB, and Unionpay are accepted in some but not all shops in Copenhagen, especially in Strøget, the main shopping district. When accepted, a transaction fee (mandated by credit card companies, not shops) of 0.75 to 4.00 % of the amount will usually be charged on credit cards issued by foreign banks.


Almost all ATMs accept major international cards, including all the ones mentioned previously. Therefore it is worth noting that although some shops may not accept all credit cards, an ATM capable of doing so will in most cases be less than 200 metres away, particularly in central Copenhagen.


Press Edit.


The Copenhagen Post [132] and The Murmur [133] are the country's two English language newspapers. Copenhagen Post is published weekly on Saturdays, and is available at many bars and cafés, as well as for sale in the Magasin department store, and the kiosks at the Central, Vesterport, Østerport, and Hellerup stations for 20 Kr. The Murmur is free and is published once a month.


Embassies Edit.


Argentina , Borgergade 16 , ☎ +45 33 15 80 82 . M-F 10AM-1PM .  edit Australia , Dampfærgevej 26 , ☎ +45 70 26 36 76 , [17]. M-F 8:30AM-4:30PM .  edit Austria , Sølundsvej 1 , ☎ +45 39 29 41 41 . M-F 9:30PM-noon .  edit Belgium , Øster Allé 7 , ☎ +45 35 25 02 00 , [18]. M-Th 9AM-12:30PM - 1:30PM-4:30PM (F 3:30PM) .  edit Brazil , Ryvangs Allé, 24 , ☎ +45 45 39 20 64 78 , [19]. M-F 9AM-3PM .  edit Bulgaria , Gamlehave alle 7, 2920 Charlottenlund , ☎ + 45/39/64 24 84, 63 38 72 , [20]. M-F 8:30AM-noon & 1PM-4:30PM .  edit Canada , Kristen Bernikowsgade 1 , ☎ +45 33 48 32 00 , [21]. M-F 8:30AM-noon & 1PM-4:30PM .  edit China , Øregårds Allé 25 , ☎ +45 39 46 08 89 , [22]. M-F 9AM-noon .  edit Cuba , Kastelsvej 19, 3tv , ☎ +45 39 40 15 10 , [23]. M, W & F 9AM-noon .  edit Egypt , Kristianiagade 19 , ☎ +45 35437070 ( [ protected] ", fax : +45 35253262 ), [24]. M-F 9:00 AM - 16:00 PM .  edit Estonia , Aurehøjvej 19 , ☎ +45 39 46 30 70 , [25]. M, W & F 10AM-noon .  edit Finland , Sankt Annæ Plads 24 , ☎ +45 33 13 42 14 . M-F 9AM-noon & 1PM-3:30PM .  edit France , Ny Østergade 3, 2nd floor , ☎ +45 33 67 01 64 , [26]. M-F 8:30AM-12:30PM .  edit Germany , Stockholmsgade 57 , ☎ +45 35 45 99 00 , [27]. M-F 9AM-noon except W 1PM-4PM .  edit Ghana , Egebjerg Allé 13 , ☎ +45 39 62 82 22 , [28]. M-Th 9AM-1PM .  edit Greece , Bornholmsgade 3 , ☎ +45 33 34 60 48 , [29]. M-F 10AM-noon .  edit Iceland , Strandgade 89 , ☎ +45 33 18 10 50 , [30]. M-F 9AM-4PM .  edit India , Vangehusvej 15 , ☎ +45 39 18 34 44 , [31]. M-F 9:30AM-noon .  edit Indonesia , Ørehøj Alle 1 , ☎ +45 39 62 44 22 , [32]. M-F 9AM-noon .  edit Ireland , Østbanegade 21 , ☎ +45 35 47 32 00 , [33]. M-F 10AM-12:30PM-2:30PM-4PM .  edit Israel , Lundevangsvej 4 , ☎ +45 88 18 55 00 , [34]. M-F 10AM-1PM .  edit Italy , Gammel Vartov Vej 7 , ☎ +45 39 62 68 77 , [35]. M 10AM-noon & 2PM-4PM Tu-F 10AM-noon .  edit Japan , Pilestræde 61 , ☎ +45 33 11 33 44 , [36]. M-F 9AM-noon & 1:30PM-5PM .  edit Latvia , Rosbæksvej 17 , ☎ +45 39 27 60 00 , [37]. M-Th 10AM-noon .  edit Lithuania , Bernstorffsvej 214 , ☎ +45 39 63 62 07 , [38]. M-F 9AM-1PM & 2PM-4PM .  edit.


Macedonia , Skindergade 28, A, 1.th., 1159 Copenhagen , ☎ +45 39 766 920 ( [ protected] , fax : +45 39 766 923 ), [39].  edit Malaysia , Clipper House, Sundkrogsgade 19, 2100 Copenhagen Ø , ☎ (+45) 4911 8308 . Appointment Required .  edit Mexico , Bredgade 65 1. floor 1260 Copenhagen , ☎ +(45) 39 61 05 00 , [40]. Appointment Required .  edit Mongolia ( consulate ), Bolbrovej 20 , ☎ +45 32 52 44 27 , [41]. By appointment only .  edit Nepal , Svanemøllevej 92 , ☎ +45 44 44 40 43 , [42]. M-F 10AM-1PM .  edit The Netherlands , Toldbodgade 33 , ☎ +45 33 70 72 00 , [43]. M-F 9AM-noon .  edit New Zealand , Store Strandstræde 21, 2.tv , ☎ +45 33 37 77 02 , [44]. M-Th 10AM-2PM .  edit Norway , Amaliegade 39 , ☎ +45 33 14 01 24 , [45]. M-Th 08.30AM-4PM, F 8:30AM-3:30PM .  edit Pakistan , Valeursvej 17 , ☎ +45 39 62 11 88 , [46]. M-F 10AM-noon, except W 3PM-5PM .  edit Poland , Richelieus Alle 12 , ☎ +45 39 46 77 00 , [47]. M-F 9AM-2PM, except W 1PM-6PM .  edit Portugal , Toldbodgade 31 , ☎ +45 33 13 13 01 , [48]. M-F 10AM-4PM .  edit Russia , Kristianiagade 5 , ☎ +45 35 38 23 70 , [49]. M-F 9AM-noon .  edit Singapore , Snorresgade 20 , ☎ +45 32 54 83 60 . By appointment only .  edit South Korea , Svanemøllevej 104 , ☎ +45 39 46 04 00 , [50]. M-F 10AM-noon .  edit South Africa , Gammel Vartov Vej 8 , ☎ +45 39 18 01 55 , [51]. M-F 9AM-noon .  edit Spain , Kristianiagade 21 , ☎ +45 35 42 22 66 . M-Th 9AM-5PM, F 9AM-2.30PM .  edit Sweden , Sankt Annæ Plads 15 A , ☎ +45 33 36 03 75 , [52]. M-F 10AM-noon, W also 2AM-4PM .  edit Switzerland , Amaliegade 14 , ☎ +45 33 14 17 96 , [53]. M-F 9:30AM-12:30PM .  edit Taiwan , Amaliegade 3, 2F , ☎ +45 33 93 51 52 , [54]. M-F 10AM-1PM .  edit Thailand , Norgesmindevej 18 , ☎ +45 39 62 50 10 , [55]. 9AM-11.45AM .  edit Turkey , Rosbæksvej 15 , ☎ +45 39 20 27 88 , [56]. M-F 9AM-1PM & 2PM-5PM .  edit Ukraine , Toldbodgade 37A , ☎ +45 33 16 16 35 , [57]. M, W,F 10AM-1PM, Tu 3PM-5PM .  edit United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland , Kastelsvej 38 , ☎ +45 35 44 52 00 , [58]. M-F 9AM-12:30PM & 1.30PM-3PM to 15:00 .  edit United States of America , Dag Hammarskjölds Allé 24 , ☎ +45 35 55 31 44 , [59]. M-F 8:15AM-11:15PM .  edit Venezuela , Toldbodgade 31 , ☎ +45 33 93 63 11 , [60]. 9AM-1PM .  edit Vietnam , Bernstorffsvej 30C , ☎ + 45 39 18 26 29 , [61]. M-F 10AM-1PM .  edit.


Stay Safe Edit.


As elsewhere in Europe and Denmark, dial 112 for emergencies.


As when traveling in other major cities, tourists should be aware of their surroundings. Copenhagen is largely considered among the top two or three safest cities in Europe. A report in 2010 listed Copenhagen as the second safest city in the world. Homicide is so rare (0.8 in 100,000 individuals in 2012) that when it occurs it dominates the news cycle. Crimes against tourists are usually non-violent. Many pick pocketing and robbing incidents take place in tourist heavy locations, such as the central railway. Travelers should keep a close eye on their bags and place valuables on their body or inside an inner pocket on their clothing so it’s not easily accessible.


It’s safe to hail taxis on the street and they will have their cab numbers and papers on display. In the center of the city, it’s likely that the cab drivers will speak proficient English. Travelers will do well to have the exact address of their destination, as all cabs are equipped with GPS and drivers will simply plug in the address.


Copenhagen is exceptional among many of the major European cities because gender equality is such a priority. Women rarely experience street harassment and women can feel confident bicycling or walking by themselves. It’s not usual to see a group of women dressed to go out for the evening in dresses and heels on their bicycles.


The city is known for its nightlife, so expect to run into groups of drunken revellers if you’re out for the evening. The advice for handling this is nearly universal; simply ignore them and cross the street. Even while intoxicated, the Danes are polite and considerate so it’s unlikely that tourists will be harassed.


Areas of concern Edit.


Like in other cities, some of the districts outside the central metropolis deal with more gang activity and gang-related crime. Travellers are encouraged to exercise caution if travelling through the western suburbs or outside the City Center.


The first four blocks of Istedgade has a great amount of street prostitution, drug sales and homeless people. If you are on alert and vigilant, you should be fine at any hour.


Some areas of Nørrebro have gang violence though tourists are unlikely targets.


Traffic Edit.


As a pedestrian, treat bicycle lanes the same as car lanes. Look both ways before crossing, as bicycles are silent and frequently moving faster than pedestrians can anticipate. For tourists who rent bicycles, it is recommended to wear a helmet even though many Danes do not. There aren’t any compulsory helmet laws in Copenhagen. However, if you are not accustomed to bicycling every day and aren’t use to the roads and traffic laws, you may be at greater risk for a collision with another cyclist or a car. The Danish traffic laws also apply to tourist. If you are not aware of the rules for riding a bike in Denmark, you should not do so until you are. Otherwise, you risk fines, very unhappy people and death. Many Danes do not react kindly to tourists riding bikes without following the rules. Some simple rules:


Always ride your bike on the right side of the road and the right side of the bike path Always clearly hold your arm vertically into the air when stopping (except at red lights) Hold you arm horizontally to the left (when turning left) or right (when turning right) before and during a turn.


The Danish take jaywalking extremely seriously. Only cross at pedestrian crossings while the green ‘’’walk’’’ light is illuminated. There’s a risk of a 1000 DKK fine for those who try to beat the traffic or cross at non-designated points.


Stay healthy Edit.


Emergency Rooms (ER) used to be called Skadestue in Danish, and the term is still widely used and recognised by most Danes. As with many other health related terms and phrases, the English term may not be understood by some Danes — but conveniently Hospital is the same in Danish. However, due to political changes to the health system from 2013 and on, the ER function is now covered by various larger Emergency Departments, called Akutklinik . Most hospitals in and around Copenhagen require anyone seeking medical aid to first dial 1813 on the phone, which allows you to speak to a specially trained nurse (who will also be able to help in english), who will then guide you on through the health system. Note, however, that this system is for minor injuries and ailments only; major emergencies should still dial 112 for an ambulance and emergency care.


Hospitals with 24 hour Emergency Wards near the city centre include:


The public healthcare system also maintains doctors on call outside normal office hours, calls are screened by medical personnel, and doctors dispatched only when deemed necessary.


There is a 24 hour pharmacy in central Copenhagen, and 3 additional ones in the suburbs.


Steno Apotek , Vesterbrogade 6C ( Just by the Radisson Royal hotel, near the Central station ), ☎ +45 33 14 82 66 , [65]. regular hours: M-F 8.30AM-8PM, Sa 8.30AM-5PM . There is a 15 kr service charge outside those times. .  edit.


Recommended Restaurants near Kongens Nytorv & Spending Money.


My sister and I are staying at the Best Western City Hotel in March for 3 nights which I believe is in the Kongens Nytorv area. Could anybody recommend any reasonably priced restaurants in the area, any cuisine? Also I am planning on taking around £200 spending money, is this likely to be enough given the reputation Copenhagen has for being fairly expensive? The types of things we are likely to be doing is going on bus and canal tours, eating out and having a couple of glasses of wine at night, not really all that bothered about going into museums, alhough we may go in one or two. I know it's difficult to give an accurate view on the amount of spending money to take, but if £200 is not going to be nearly enough I need to get saving!


You are right, your hotel is very close to Kongens Nytorv and Nyhavn. There are many places to eat in Nyhavn, but they are what we call "Touristtraps", meaning, they are very expensive.


In Store Kongensgade (the street ends in Kongens Nytorv) are 2 great reastaurants where you really get good value for your money.


The first one is "Madklubben" (The food club). You pay 100 kroner for one dish, 150 kroners for 2 dishes and 250 kroner for 4 dishes.


The second one is Vespa. The consept is the same as "Madklubben". Here you will get a 4 course dinner, a bottle of wine, water and a aperitif for 400 kroner.


Well, 200£ is about 1690Dkr, it's not so much.


In my opinion you deliver 100 krones all the time: a meal from a cheap chinese buffet: 92Kr, t-shirt 200Kr, a simple jacket 600Kr, Rosenborg Castle ticket:70 Kr, Glyptotek ticket 60Kr, The Round Tower is cheap: 25 Kr.


A chicken meal in Burger King: 49Kr (medium drink). A filled tringle sandwich in a supermarket: 25Kr (at airport shops: 39Kr).


It might be enough but clothes seemed to be expensive.


There is Magasin du Nord department store at Kongens Nytorv.


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Recommended Restaurants near Kongens Nytorv & Spending Money - Copenhagen Forum.


TRADING COURSE Sample.


Travelling and Trading - Copenhagen.


Travelling and Trading - Copenhagen.


Happy traders - hej med jer! As they would have said in Danish! I was back from my short end of month (January 2016) trip to Copenhagen. Travelling and trading - trading has allowed me to travel on a regular basis. Have a look at my previous trip to Stockholm. Going to new countries and towns has enabled me to:


1) Take a break from trading.


2) Visit a great location.


3) Explore new cultures and enjoy life, which is too short to be spent in an office.


I am absolutely grateful and that is why I am trying to share my knowledge with you, so you can follow your dreams too and do whatever you like with your free time. For me trading has enabled me to travel, explore new cultures and live a happier life. Such a cliche some would say… but let me share some of my impressions from my last trip with you and you can share with me what you think about it in the comments below.


I believe that the best way to explore happiness is not only to concentrate on one part of your life - career, family, side interests… it is a combination of those factors and as a balanced person, I highly recommend you to visit this beautiful city. According to wikipedia: Copenhagen is the capital and most populated city of Denmark with an urban population of 1,263,698 (as of 1 January 2015) and a metropolitan population of 2,013,009. Founded as a fishing village in the 10th century, Copenhagen became the capital of Denmark-Norway in the early 15th century. Beginning in the 17th century, under the reign of Christian IV of the German House of Oldenburg, Copenhagen developed into an important European regional centre.


Before I proceed with the images from the city itself, I would like to show you the place where me and a few other trading buddies of mine were staying. The first picture shows my favourite part of the living room, where we were having music-disputes after a long day of sightseeing. On top of the gramophone, you can see my most favourite long play - “ That’s Soul II “.


When you turn yourself to the right, you can see through the window the “ Black Diamond” or the public library and the canal in front of it. It was even better during the night, but taking pictures was the last thing on my mind during the late hours.


End of January/February are not particularly famous months to visit the city and that is why it looks a bit empty. We have organised our trip during these months on purpose. We wanted to explore the authentic atmosphere of the city in our own way. I was grateful to explore different parts of the city, which otherwise are packed with tourists.


Travelling and Trading - The Breakfast.


Usually we were having a breakfast at home - buying danish pastry from the local chain of bakeries called Lagkagehuset. The variety of the pastries was incredible and I am sharing with you a couple of very intimate images showing the selection of pastries we had upon arrival:


These “salivating” pictures were taken early in the second morning upon our arrival and every time I look at them, they still make me hungry. Deviating between greed and fear, trying those danish pastries has definitely improved my mental capacity… so much sugar…


One way or another, after devouring such an incredible amount of calories, we were ready for our long days of exploring the city. As we found out later - no matter how cold the days were, people were probably the warmest and friendliest we have ever met somewhere in Europe.


Travelling and Trading - The City.


After breakfast, we were usually heading down the bridge of Torvegade to the city centre. For the short stay in the city, we managed to see some of the biggest attractions. Some of which were closed, so we needed to use our detective sense of orientation and city guides to go to the next stop. One of the major attractions and probably number one in every guide was: Tivoli.


The famous Tivoli attraction was unfortunately closed. Nevertheless, it still looks quite impressive even when it is closed. Tivoli Gardens (or simply Tivoli ) is a famous amusement park and pleasure garden in Copenhagen, Denmark. The park opened on 15 August 1843 and is the second-oldest operating amusement park in the world… Now you understand why we were a bit upset when we realised it is closed…but in the end that was just one of the places that we were supposed to visit. There was one more place of interest that was closed and I really wanted to visit - the Museum of Copenhagen …


Just like trading the financial markets - sightseeing a new city offers its ups and downs. We were lucky enough not to be surrounded by too many tourists, but on the other side, some of the famous places were closed. That gave us another advantage - to visit some of the less visited places of interest, like local pubs from 1850 and a very small restaurant in the oldest building in Copenhagen, where H. C. Andersen was dining on a regular basis - Kong Hans Kaelder.


Let’s continue with the more famous places, though. Another brilliant spot that we went to was the Nyhavn. Nyhavn (or New Harbour) is a 17th-century waterfront, canal and entertainment district in Copenhagen. Stretching from Kongens Nytorv to the harbour front just south of the Royal Playhouse, it is lined by brightly coloured 17th and early 18th century townhouses and bars, cafes and restaurants as you can see below. It was probably one of the most romantic places (ideal for the 14th of February). Let’s have a look at some of the images I have taken during day and night…


As colourful as it gets, Nyhavn was one of my favourite spots to hang out especially during the nights. The plethora of colours is giving an incomparable to any other city charm. The city of Copenhagen is pretty compact and you can easily walk from one side to the other within a couple of hours. Even so, some might be misled by its size and leave a lot of beautiful sights unexplored. For me, a visitor should stay at least 5-7 days in order to capture the soul of the city…


Travelling and Trading - The City 2.


Continuing our city sightseeing, we stopped at a few other interesting places. The one that is going to attract a lot of attention (especially among the beer-lovers) is the Carlsberg museum . It was a great exBEERience! I bet that a few of you (not counting the Danish) know that Carlsberg is “Made in Denmark”. You will need at least 4-5 hours in order to exBEERience the atmosphere accordingly. There is a beer tasting event taking place every few hours - make sure you visit one of these. All in all, the place was charming and the atmosphere inside the factory was invigorating. In the exhibition room, there were over 35,000 different types of beer from all around the world.


From the Carlsberg museum, we continued our sightseeing tour to the “ Hippie ” neighbourhood as they call it or Christiania . It is a self-proclaimed autonomous neighborhood of about 850 residents, covering 34 hectares (84 acres) in the borough of Christianshavn (where we were staying). Civic authorities in Copenhagen regard Christiania as a large commune, but the area has a unique status in that it is regulated by a special law, the Christiania Law of 1989, which transfers parts of the supervision of the area from the municipality of Copenhagen to the state. It was closed by residents in April 2011, whilst discussions continued with the Danish government as to its future, but is now open again. There is only one picture I took and that is because it is prohibited to do two things in this neighbourhood: 1) taking pictures 2) running . Therefore, we were walking very slowly and hiding all cameras, telephones and iPads. The picture below does reflect the easy-going status of the place:


The next day we visited a few more places amongst which the most famous statue in the city - The Little Mermaid . It is a symbolic place that gathers tourists attention like a flash crash flocks traders in font of their screens. Based on the fairy tale by the Danish author Hans Christian Andersen( the one that I mentioned earlier), the small and unimposing statue is a Copenhagen icon and has been a major tourist attraction since 1913. In recent decades it has become a popular target for defacement by vandals and political activists. No matter what other say, I was not 100% convinced that this is the best attraction in Copenhagen. 어떻게 생각해?


After we finished with the Little Mermaid attraction, it was already getting late, so we headed towards the Strøget , which is probably the longest pedestrian shopping street in Europe - at 1.1km. The pedestrianisation of Strøget in 1962 marked the beginning a major change in the approach of Copenhagen to urban life; following the success of the initiative the city moved to place a much greater emphasis on pedestrian and bicycle access to the city at the expense of cars. This approach has in turn become internationally influential. There we went to the round tower and oldest functioning observatory in Europe - Rundetaarn . From the top I made those lovely night pictures of Copenhagen:


This was our last night in Copenhagen and we enjoyed it with a nice dinner with local food, which included the famous open sandwiches and Carlsberg beer… Next day we were flying back, but we still managed to make a boat tour and visit the Museum of Denmark , which was quite impressive.


In between, we’ve managed to squeeze a quick lunch and beer in a pub that was decorated with antiques, as can be seen from the pictures below:


Since every trip has a beginning and an end, we ended up this wonderful short stay with the memory of the warm people and the cold weather. I had mixed feelings - a bit nostalgic for leaving this amazing city, very happy that I have seen one of the greatest Nordic countries and extremely grateful that trading has enabled me to enjoy life in a way that with no other full-time job would have been possible.


Travelling and Trading - Conclusion.


My conclusion would be just seven words - Trade, Travel, Always Enjoy Your Short Lives.


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관련 게시물.


Travelling The World Trading.


회신을 남겨주 답장을 취소하십시오.


카테고리.


최근 게시물.


Non Trading Topics.


Partnerships.


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