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EPILOGUE

If the old, and at that time, new City Hall could cause so much reflection for and

against decoration and ornamentation, or inspire pride or indifference towards

public construction of those proportions, the overall question may arise: will

another building like Copenhagen City Hall ever be undertaken again?

Economically speaking, considering contemporary prices of refined

workmanship, the answer is no! But other ways of constructing might do the

trick. Just consider the latest addition to the brick-built Royal Library and notice

the use of glass and wires. Or look at Jean Nouvel’s and Danmarks Radio’s new

concert hall in Ørestaden with facades of live television screens. Or the beautifully

shining chestnut behind the façade manque of Venetian blinds inthe New Opera,

designed by the architect Henning Larsen. New technologies and the know-how

of workmanship may result in wonderful, artistic creations if desire, intention

and money suffice, supported by talent and wise builders.

In this book Copenhagen City Hall is frequently called a picture book, tangibly

filled with paintings and illustrations, but also with decorative elements of a

quainter, quirkier and more whimsical symbolic content. And on top of that the

building itself is one big pictorial manifestation of Italian memories and ancestral

roots in Danish castles and manor houses. Would it be possible to imagine any

living architect finding inspiration in Kronborg Castle when designing a new

public building?

As a matter of fact, yes! Jørn Utzon did and referred to the place when he

designed the opera house in Sydney: the steep siting, the importance of a poised,

floating roof hovering over walls and bastions, and all the white sails on the water.

The so-called post-modern period in architecture around 1980 let loose a

whole range of architectural and historical methods of building at the free

disposal of all and sundry, but the architects were not as adept at toying with

them as Martin Nyrop of the City Hall had been one hundred years earlier. This

was rooted in the fact that the post-modernists did not take ornamentation,

decoration and pictorial creation as seriously as Nyrop had done when he played

with motifs and models from his European travels.

However, on one decisive point the construction of Copenhagen City Hall was

distinctive. Lirst of all the solid and still functional building was a result of an

open architectural competition, and secondly the financing of the project was

sound if protracted over several years of budget negotiations.

In other words, the building on the City Hall Square celebrating its first

centenary has this to teach democratic construction authorities: quality pays!

A llan d e Waal

(Translated by S iff Pors)

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