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Havnegade


Havnegade is a waterfront promenade in Copenhagen, Denmark, which runs between Børs Brisge and the mouth of the Nyhavn canal. For most of its length, after initially passing Bank of Denmark, the street is lined with residential buildings built during the 1860s and 1870s as part of the redevelopment of the Gammelholm area. It is the only place along Copenhagen's main harbourfront where residential buildings of the period face the water, although older warehouses and other industrial buildings elsewhere have been converted into residential use.

The street was created when the Royal Danish Navy decommissioned its last operations in the area, which used to be a naval shipyard, and it came under urban redevelopment.

From about 1960 and until 1999, the street was a hub for tax-free ferries to Malmö on the other side of the Øresund.

Plans to transform Havnegade into a promenade were put on hold in October 2008 due to budget cuts. In the spring of 2011 construction of the project finally began and it is expected to be completed in December 2011.

The free-standing, oval building on the quay (No. 44), nicknamed the pencil case due to irs shape, is a former custom house and ferry terminal. The building was designed by Kristoffer Varming in th Functionalist style and is from 1937. It has now been converted into a jazz club and restaunt complex called The Standard.

The first part of the street (No. 5) passes Bank of Denmark. The Modernist building was designed by Arne Jacobsen as a replacement for the National Bank's old building in Holmens Kanal

No. 23 is the former Navigation School designed by Ferdinand Meldahl and built from 1863-65.


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