Nalina Moses

ARCHITECT, WRITER, CURATOR

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One of my traveling companions remarked that Copenhagen was awfully nice, but that it looked as if they had put the same building everywhere.  He’s right.  There’s a uniformity to the old parts of the city, where all the blocks are built…

One of my traveling companions remarked that Copenhagen was awfully nice, but that it looked as if they had put the same building everywhere.  He’s right.  There’s a uniformity to the old parts of the city, where all the blocks are built to a six- or seven-story height, with an identical, rather relentless pattern of high, wide windows lined up across long, flat facades.  Yet the feeling isn’t banal: the buildings vary in detail, and are scaled so that they’re solid but not oppressive.  The streets, open to the sky, are relaxed.  The big windows let in daylight, a precious commodity in this part of the world, and their insistent rhythms measure one’s passage through the streets.

Of all the tasks an architect needs to contend with, crafting a compelling facade for a city building might be the most difficult.  The street elevation is most often what shapes an image for the building and a character for the city.  Copenhagen offers an important lesson in how simple a good facade can be: it’s just a wall with windows in it.

June 18, 2012 by Nalina Moses
June 18, 2012 /Nalina Moses /Source
ARCHITECTURE, facade, Copenhagen, Denmark, Scandinavia, aesthetics
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