“See-you-at-the-bridge“ kind of place

Cirkelbroen in Christianshavn

Celebrating pedestrians

Cirkel­broen is a pede­strian bridge compri­sing five circular bridge plat­forms span­ning Chris­ti­ans­havn Canal to connect the Chris­ti­ansbro area with Applebys Plads. For years, it has been a goal of the City of Copen­hagen to create a conti­guous board­walk along the inner water­front.

Cirkel­broen cele­brates pede­strians. It reflects the daily life and inti­macy that you find around the canal in the Chris­ti­ans­havn neigh­bour­hood, its house­boats and sailing boats, the unique life on the ramparts. Copenhagen’s harbour was once a centre of mari­time acti­vity, and Cirkel­broen is a testimony to that history. While working on the bridge, the artist  Olafur Eliasson remem­bered the fishing boats he saw as a child in Iceland. In the harbour, the boats were often moored right next to each other, and it some­times seemed that you could even cross the harbour just by walking from boat to boat.

A different perspective

The bridge is made of five circular plat­forms, and it contri­butes to a larger circle that will form a pede­strian route around Copen­hagen Harbour, where people – cycling, running, walking – can see the city from a very diffe­rent perspec­tive. As many as 5,000 people will cross this bridge each day. These people shall use Cirkel­broen as a meeting place, and that the zigzag design of the bridge will make them reduce their speed and take a break. To hesi­tate on our way is to engage in bodily thought. The desi­gner sees such intro­s­pec­tion as an essen­tial part of a vibrant city.

Designer

Studio Olafur Eliasson
Chris­ti­nen­straße 18/19, Haus 2
D — 10119 Berlin

Team

Sebas­tian Behmann, Robert Banović, Jan Bünnig

Client

Nordea-fonden

User

City of Copen­hagen

Author

Olafur Eliasson

Photograph

Anders Sune Berg

Address

Cirkel­broen
Johan Semps Gade
DK — Køben­havn K

Aerial view

Thank you, Google!

Opening

2015

Inclusion and tradition

In Denmark, there is a strong tradi­tion of focu­sing on inclu­sion, on accep­ting the other – welco­ming ideas that we have not yet had, people we have not yet met, and unpre­dic­table encoun­ters. It’s some­thing we all have to work on toge­ther, and one way of addres­sing this is in how we plan public space. Cirkel­broen will contri­bute to impro­ving the quality of life and the deve­lo­p­ment of a hospi­table and inclu­sive city.

Cirkel­broen is a gift from Nordea­fonden to the City of Copen­hagen. Nordea-fonden is a non-profit and chari­table foun­da­tion supporting acti­vi­ties that promote good living in Denmark. Cirkel­broen creates new spaces along the water­front. It brings people closer to the water and encou­rages them to slow down a little and take a break. It has already become a meeting place, a “see-you-at-the-bridge“ kind of place.

Allow it to grow

In Copen­hagen, progress has been made in thin­king about what consti­tutes quality in urban space and about the atmo­sphere of a space. Obviously, one cannot plan atmo­sphere, as it is co-produced by the people who use the space, but it is possible to nurture an atmo­sphere, to allow it to grow. As an artist, desi­gner Olafur Eliasson works with abstract and emotional quali­ties, so this is where art can play a role. Poli­ti­cians, urban plan­ners, and deve­lo­pers need to expand their toolbox by brin­ging in what Eliasson calls crea­tive reality produ­cers – artists, social scien­tists, socio­lo­gists, anthro­po­lo­gists, histo­rians, dancers, poets, envi­ron­mental acti­vists, and philo­so­phers – to rethink urban spaces.

Images

Videos

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