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Der Nationalpark Mols Bjerge ist von faszinierender Schönheit. Die abwechslungsreiche, hügelige Landschaft beinhaltet weite Heideflächen, kleine Kiefernwälder. Moore und Seen, sowie vielgestaltige kleine landwirtschaftliche Flächen. Ein ausgedehntes Wegenetz erlaubt den Park wandernd oder radfahrend zu erschliessen. Wer in Djursland Urlaub macht, sollte auf jedenFall einen Besuch in den Mols Bjergen einplanen.
Nationalparken Mols er fascinerende skønhed. Det varierede, bakkede landskab omfatter enorme heder, små fyrreskove. Moore og søer, og mangeartet lidt landbrugsjord. Et omfattende netværk af stier giver parken cykling eller vandreture til at trykke. Hvem gør i helligdage Djursland bør planlægge i hvert fald et besøg i Mols Bjergen.
www.visitdenmark.de/de/ostjutland/geschichte/nationalpark...
Back at magic Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm. This wonderful museum has turned in to my family's little wonderland as both my kids love trams! It is an absolutely fantastic experience for both young and old.
The museum is idyllically located by the manor Skjoldenæsholm in Midtsjælland, and one is taken in from the parking lot by tram to the museum.
The museum has approx. 140 trams and buses, where approx. 30 trams and 15 buses are approved for driving with passengers. This tram is driving on tracks that were built on part of the Sjællandske Midtbane, which was closed down in 1936.
For more magic photos of trams, please visit my Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm album.
Skjoldenæsholm Tram Museum is the longest museum in Denmark and I think also one of the most beautiful open air musuems!
Did you know that there were double decker trams once in Copenhagen?
KS 22 was built in 1900 and was used until 1972 when closed down the last tram line.
The model had stairs in both ends.
For more magic photos of trams, please visit my Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm album.
From my family's little paradise. We love trams!
And the blue one is from our hometown, Oslo. The museum is getting a "new" tram from Oslo next year if rumours are correct.
Brumleby (formerly Lægeforening's homes) is a residential building on Østerbro, Copenhagen in Denmark.
As a consequence of the cholera epidemic in Copenhagen in 1853, Brumleby was built on Østerfælled. The construction started in 1853 and the project was funded with that Lægeforeningen collected on a private basis. Lægeforeningen wanted to create healthy and cheap homes for the working class.
The construction phase stretched from 1853-1857 and in the first stage was built 240 very small one and two-bedroom apartments, where it at the beginning lived approx. 900 people. Due to the war in 1864, there was a number of years before the rest of the settlement was completed. This happened in 1866-1872.
When the construction was complete, it was approx. 550 apartments in Brumleby with approx. 2500 people living there.
Der Nationalpark Mols Bjerge ist von faszinierender Schönheit. Die abwechslungsreiche, hügelige Landschaft beinhaltet weite Heideflächen, kleine Kiefernwälder. Moore und Seen, sowie vielgestaltige kleine landwirtschaftliche Flächen. Ein ausgedehntes Wegenetz erlaubt den Park wandernd oder radfahrend zu erschliessen. Wer in Djursland Urlaub macht, sollte auf jedenFall einen Besuch in den Mols Bjergen einplanen.
Nationalparken Mols er fascinerende skønhed. Det varierede, bakkede landskab omfatter enorme heder, små fyrreskove. Moore og søer, og mangeartet lidt landbrugsjord. Et omfattende netværk af stier giver parken cykling eller vandreture til at trykke. Hvem gør i helligdage Djursland bør planlægge i hvert fald et besøg i Mols Bjergen.
www.visitdenmark.de/de/ostjutland/geschichte/nationalpark...
Der Nationalpark Mols Bjerge ist von faszinierender Schönheit. Die abwechslungsreiche, hügelige Landschaft beinhaltet weite Heideflächen, kleine Kiefernwälder. Moore und Seen, sowie vielgestaltige kleine landwirtschaftliche Flächen. Ein ausgedehntes Wegenetz erlaubt den Park wandernd oder radfahrend zu erschliessen. Wer in Djursland Urlaub macht, sollte auf jedenFall einen Besuch in den Mols Bjergen einplanen.
Nationalparken Mols er fascinerende skønhed. Det varierede, bakkede landskab omfatter enorme heder, små fyrreskove. Moore og søer, og mangeartet lidt landbrugsjord. Et omfattende netværk af stier giver parken cykling eller vandreture til at trykke. Hvem gør i helligdage Djursland bør planlægge i hvert fald et besøg i Mols Bjergen.
www.visitdenmark.de/de/ostjutland/geschichte/nationalpark...
A fantastic living museum with trams and buses. The museum is idyllically located by the manor Skjoldenæsholm in Midtsjælland, and one is taken in from the parking lot by tram to the museum.
The museum has approx. 140 trams and buses, where approx. 30 trams and 15 buses are approved for driving with passengers. These 30 trams are driven on a small museum track out into the woods where a picnic wagon stands with refreshments. This track was built on part of the Sjællandske Midtbane, which was closed down in 1936.
An absolutely fantastic experience for both young and old.
For more magic photos of trams, please visit my Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm album.
With two boys we did the mandatory visit to Legoland this summer. Wow, what a place for both kids and parents. A personal favourite of mine is Miniland.
A superbly detailed miniature version of Nyhavn harbour in Copenhagen, Denmark.
My big question is... How many lego pieces were used to recreate Nyhavn?
In the South Zealand nature you can visit Skovtårnet, a 45m high tower in the middle of Gisselfeld's forests, and get a magnificent view from the top of the tower high above the crowns of the trees.
For each time you have walked one round in one of the 12 circles towards the top, you will discover that the nature around you changes along with the architecture. Up, up, up until you reach the center of the lookout tower, where the hourglass structure is laced together so tightly that you can touch three beech trees growing in the center of the tower. Finally, you step out onto the viewing platform 140 meters above sea level with a view of forest and fields, and where on a clear day you can see all the way to Copenhagen and Malmö, more than 50 kilometers away.
I took this photo on my iPhone with Panorama mode.
Møns Klint are a 6 km stretch of chalk cliffs along the eastern coast of the Danish island of Møn in the Baltic Sea. Some of the cliffs fall a sheer 120 m to the sea below.
The Tram 327 in front of Valby Gamle Remise (Tram Depot).
Tram 327 was built in 1912 by Scandia and was taken out of service in 1965. It was operated by Københavnske motorvogne. It is 10m long and 2,1m wide, and has the capacity of 20 seats and 37 standing places. It's appearance is from 1955-1965.
The tram depot is for the trams operating the normal track section at the museum. It was originally built in 1901 and rebuilt at the museum in 1995-1998.
For more magic photos of trams, please visit my Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm album.
A perfect day for kite training at the North Coast of Sealand in Denmark. The small holiday village Gilleleje offer grass and sand at the beaches right in the city center.
More from the net of Gilleleje in Denmark.
Gilleleje lies in Gribskov Municipality, at Sealand's northernmost point, Gilbjerghoved. The town has preserved many of the idyllic cosy streets and thatched houses built when it was a fishing village. Gilleleje is a lively tourist, commercial and fishing town. Its heart is the fishing port, Sealand's largest.
I visited this beautiful beach and lighthouse on a stormy morning and left it in almost sunshine. This photo was taken just after it stopped raining.
Bellevue Beach is a is a 700-metre-long sandy beach at Klampenborg on the northern outskirts of Copenhagen, Denmark.
The iconic lighthouse or lighthouses, cause there is two of them, have quite a history. In the 1930s, when the right to vacation became legally mandated, Denmark's coastline became the country's most popular holiday destination. Gentofte Municipality made plans to develop a piece of coastline north of Copenhagen into a seaside resort complex combining an existing park designed by the landscape architect C.Th. Sørensen with beach facilities catering to some 15,000 paying visitors a day. Three architects were invited to submit plans for a Bellevue beach complex. The winner was the young architect Arne Jacobsen, who had just opened his office. Characteristic of his approach to architecture and design—he was preoccupied with the concept of Gesamtkunst—Jacobsen designed everything from bathing cabins, lifeguard towers and kiosks to tickets and uniforms for the staff. The complex also included the Bellavista apartment buildings (1934), a restaurant and the Bellevue Theatre (1936), all of which still stand today in the immediate vicinity of the beach.
The beach with the lighthouses opened in 1932.
KS 22 is an old double-decker tram from Copenhagen build in 1900 by F. C. Schultz. Here at the end loop of the museum line, Eilers Eg. Eilers Eg is a beautiful picnic area where it is possible to buy food and refreshment. The end loop is also the start point for a hike in the woods.
For more magic photos of trams, please visit my Sporvejsmuseet Skjoldenæsholm album.
Lovely Noboder with its old mustard yellow "military barracks" can be found downtown Copenhagen.
As the fleet grew rapidly under Christian IV, there was a need for proper housing for the privates and their families. It was therefore built approx. 200 homes. Each dwelling was about 40 m², consisting of a living room of 19 m², a chamber, anteroom and a kitchen shared with the neighboring apartment.
Nyboder is still used as rental housing for the military personnel.
Until 2006, the navy had priority rights to the homes, but after that, the Army and the Air Force also have the right to use them on equal terms.
One of my favourite buildings here in Copenhagen.
The new Natural History Museum is being built next to it, so I tried to keep the cranes out of the picture. Here's a photo from a few years back in time.
Make sure to check out the summer flies as well if you are visiting. They are stunningly beautiful!
Rain and thunder was very present under some days we just enjoyed in the old town Hillerød in Denmark.
Above details from the sculptures in front of the old Fredriksborg Castle.
More of Fredriksborg Castle from the net:
It was built as a royal residence for King Christian IV of Denmark-Norway in the early 17th century, replacing an older castle acquired by Frederick II and becoming the largest Renaissance residence in Scandinavia. Frederiksborg Castle (Danish: Frederiksborg Slot) is a palatial complex in Hillerød, Denmark.
Situated on three islets in the Slotssøen (castle lake), it is adjoined by a large formal garden in the Baroque style.
These colourful chairs were found in Det Kongelige Biblioteks Have.
This park apparently has an amazing history. I overheard a teacher telling his pupils that this place first was a shipyard for the king, but when the ships got to big, the place was turned in to an arms factory and that the park was an area where they tested out granates! A good thing that the park now is a place for peace and thoughts.