City Campus (University of Copenhagen)

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CSS on Oster Farimagsgade Kommunehospitalet (Copenhagen).jpg
CSS on Øster Farimagsgade

The City Campus is one of the University of Copenhagen's four campuses in Copenhagen, Denmark. It is home to the Faculty of Social Sciences and parts of the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences and the Faculty of Science. [1] The main campus area, the Center for Health and Society (Danish : Center for Sundhed og Samfund, abbr. CSS), is situated on Øster Farimagsgade, across the street from the University's Botanical Garden, which is also part of the campus area. The City Campus also comprises a building on Øster Voldgade (Mo. 10) and the university headquarters on Frue Plads. [2]

Contents

Overview

Festsalen in the main building located on Frue Plads. Festhalen University of Copenhag.jpg
Festsalen in the main building located on Frue Plads.

In all, the City Campus occupies five sites: [2]


Center for Health and Society

The Center for Health and Society is located in the former Copenhagen Municipal Hospital. As of January 2016, the Centre houses the entire Faculty of Social Sciences, most of the Department of Public Health and the Copenhagen School of Global Health. [3]

History

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital Kobenhavns Kommunehospital layout.jpg
Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

The Copenhagen Municipal Hospital was one of the first buildings to be constructed on the glacis outside of the North Rampart when the fortifications were decommissioned. It was the first major project to be designed by Copenhagen's new city architect, Christian Hansen, who had recently returned to Denmark from Greece. Construction began in 1859 and the hospital was inaugurated on 19 September 1863.

Christian Hansen's original hospital building consisted of two three-story main wings joined together by two connectors. [4] In 1954, the complex was expanded by city architect Frederik Christian Lund in a style similar to that of the original buildings. The Copenhagen Municipal Hospital closed on 1 May 1999. The buildings were then taken over by University of Copenhagen. [5]

In 2005, the university established the Center for Health and Society in the former Copenhagen Municipal Hospital. A new building designed by Erik Møller Arkitekter was completed on the corner of Øster Farimagsgade and Gammeltoftsgade in 2013. It contains auditoriums for the University as well as a daycare for children of university faculty. [6]

Copenhagen Botanical Garden

The University of Copenhagen Botanical Garden covers an area of 10 hectares and is particularly noted for its extensive complex of historical glasshouses. The garden is part of the Natural History Museum of Denmark, which is itself part of the University of Copenhagen's Faculty of Science. It serves both research, educational and recreational purposes.

The Botanical Garden had previously been located at Charlottenborg Palace, and was relocated to its new site in 1870.

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Vester, Nørre and Øster Farimagsgade is a succession of streets which together connect the south-western Vesterbro to the northern Østerbro along the periphery of the city centre in Copenhagen, Denmark. A continuation of Reventlowsgade, Vester Farimagsgade extends from Vesterbrogade at Vesterport Station and initially runs along the sunken railway tracks on the left before soon reaching H. C. Andersens Boulevard. It then turns into Nørre Farimagsgade and continues behind Ørsted Park to Gothersgade where it becomes Øster Farimagsgade and proceeds along another green space, the Copenhagen Botanical Garden, passes Sølvtorvet and the neighbourhood of terraced houses known as Kartoffelrækkerne before terminating at Lille Triangel where Østerbrogade begins.

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References

  1. "Map and campus areas". University of Copenhagen. Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  2. 1 2 "City Campus 2015" (PDF). University of Copenhagen. 13 October 2014. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  3. "The Campus". University of Copenhagen. Archived from the original on 15 July 2013. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  4. "Kommunehospitalet". Gyldendal. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
  5. "To hospitaler – to runde fødselsdage" (in Danish). Københavns Kommune. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
  6. "Indvielse af nybyggeri på CSS" (in Danish). Københavns Universitet. 31 May 2013. Retrieved 2013-10-02.

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