Parks and open spaces in Copenhagen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Copenhagen is a green city well endowed with open spaces. It has an extensive and well-distributed system of parks that act as venues for a wide array of events and urban life. As a supplement to the regular parks, there are a number of congenial public gardens and some cemeteries doubling as parks. It is official municipal policy in Copenhagen that all citizens by 2015 must be able to reach a park or beach on foot in less than 15 minutes.[1]
Parks

King's Garden (55.6852°N 12.5799°E), the garden of Rosenborg Castle, is the oldest and most visited park in Copenhagen.[2] Its landscaping was commenced by Christian IV in 1606. Every year it sees more than 2.5 million visitors,[3] and in the summer months it is packed with sunbathers, picknickers and ballplayers. It also serves as a sculpture garden with a permanent display of sculptures as well as temporary exhibits during summer.[4] Just north of King's Garden a series of parks make up a green strand running right through the centre of the city. These are constructed on the old ramparts of the city and include Østre Anlæg (55.6906°N 12.5813°E) and Ørsted Park (55.6811°N 12.5663°E), as well as the Botanical Garden (55.6867°N 12.5736°E), which is particularly noted for a large complex of 19th-century greenhouses donated by Carlsberg founder J. C. Jacobsen.[5]
Fælledparken (55.7023°N 12.5672°E) in the northern part of the city is, at 58 hectares, the largest park in Copenhagen.[6] It is popular for sports and hosts an array of annual events, including a free opera concert at the opening of the opera season, other open-air concerts, carnival, Labour Day celebrations and the Copenhagen Historic Grand Prix, which is a race for antique cars. Another popular park is the Frederiksberg Gardens (55.6754°N 12.5257°E), which is a 32-hectare romantic landscape park. It houses a large colony of very tame grey herons along with other waterfowl. The park also offers views of the elephants and the elephant house, designed by the world-famous British architect Norman Foster, at the adjacent Copenhagen Zoo.
Some of Copenhagen's newer parks draw from their position by the water. Havneparken (55.6663°N 12.5754°E), established in 1995, covers 2.8 hectares of dockland in the Islands Brygge neighbourhood and has a bandstand roofed by an upside-down old wooden ship, as well as the first of Copenhagen's harbour baths. Amager Beach Park (55.6566°N 12.6411°E) was founded in 1934, but in 2005 a 2.4-kilometre-long artificial island was added, separated from the original beach by a lagoon crossed by three bridges.[7]
It is official municipal policy in Copenhagen that all citizens by 2015 must be able to reach a park or beach on foot in less than 15 minutes.[8] In line with this policy, several new parks are under development in areas poor in green spaces.[9][10] One of those recently completed is Superkilen, an innovative park for the ethnic inhabitants of the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen.[11]
Public gardens

Besides the regular parks, a number of gardens open to the general public serve as important green spaces in central Copenhagen. These include:
- The Library Garden (55.6746°N 12.5813°E), the garden of the Royal Library on Slotsholmen, located between the library and Christiansborg Palace[12]
- The Glyptoteque Garden (55.6721°N 12.5712°E), the small garden behind the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek
- Grønnegården (55.6864°N 12.5935°E), the inner courtyard of the Museum of Art & Design
- The Carlsberg Academy Garden in the Carlsberg District (55.6644°N 12.5333°E), one of two historic gardens at the former brewery site. Now open to the public during daytime.
Cemeteries

Characteristic of Copenhagen is that a number of cemeteries double as parks, though only for the more quiet activities such as sunbathing, reading and meditation.[13] Assistens Cemetery (55.6912°N 12.5497°E), the burial place of Hans Christian Andersen among others, is an important green space for the district of Inner Nørrebro and a Copenhagen institution. The lesser-known Vestre Cemetery (55.6578°N 12.5294°E) is, at 54 hectares, the largest cemetery in Denmark[14] and offers a maze of dense groves, open lawns, winding paths, hedges, overgrown tombs, monuments, tree-lined avenues, lakes and other garden features.
Greenways
Semi-natural areas

Some open spaces on the outskirts of Copenhagen have a more informal and semi-natural character, having originally been countryside areas protected against surrounding urbanisation. They include:
- Amager Common (55°39′0.65″N 12°34′41.78″E), is a 223 hectare protected area on Amager.[16]
- Kalvebod Common (55.6086°N 12.5354°E), a 2,000-hectare protected area right next to the new business district of Ørestad. Its natural, slightly maintained parkland features a range of ecosystems, from young forests to tidal marshes; some areas are prevented from developing into forests by grazing livestock and game.
- Utterslev Mose (55.7173°N 12.5060°E), a 221-hectare area in the northwestern part of Copenhagen. Three lakes with extensive reed beds cover a total of 91 hectares and are surrounded by parkland.[17]
- Deer Garden Forest Park (55.7984°N 12.5632°E), a 1,100-hectare nature area north of Copenhagen. The area is noted for its mixture of huge, ancient oak trees and large populations of red and fallow deer.
- Vestskoven (55.6925°N 12.3682°E), a 130-hectare forested area located west of Copenhagen, mainly in Albertslund Municipality
- Hareskoven (55.7702°N 12.4039°E), a 485-hectare forested area to the northwest of Copenhagen, situated in Furesø and Gladsaxe municipalities