Composers' Quarter, Copenhagen

(Redirected from Kildevæld Quarter)

The Composers' Quarter (Danish: Komponistkvarteret or Komponistbyen) or Strandvej Quarter (Danish: Strandvejskvarteret), confusingly also known as the Kildevæld Quarter, or the Svanemølle Quarter (Danish: Svanemøllekvarteret), is an enclave of terraced houses located just west of Svanemøllen Station, between Østerbrogade and Kildevækd Park, in the Østerbro district of Copenhagen, Denmark. Most of the streets in the area are named after Danish or Nordic composers. The 393 townhouses were originally built by the Workers' Building Society (Danish: Arbejdernes Byggeforening) to provide affordable and healthy housing for working-class families, though latterly they have become very desirable middle-class homes.

Kildeværdsgade

History edit

 
Kildevæld in 1884

The name Kildevæld Quarter refers to Kildevækrd, a country house and inn which had been located at the site since the eighteenth century. The house was located at the corner of Kildevækrdsgade and Østerbrogade. The site was acquired by Arbejdernes Byggeforening in the 1890s. The building society had already created a number of similar developments, including Kartoffelrækkerne while Humleby in Vesterbro was still under construction. The architect Frederik Bøttge was charged with designing the buildings. Construction took place between 1892 and 1903.[1]

Layout and street names edit

 
Garden with Ulrik and Melchior memorial

The Composers' Quarter is surrounded by the streets Thomas Laubs Gade, Edvard Griegs Gade, Hornemangade, Østerbrogade and Landskronagade. The houses are built in yellow brick with bands of red brick. Properties with street-facing gables are mixed with more common houses featuring dormer windows to provide variation along the long, straight streets.

The central thoroughfare of the area is Kildevældsgade, a 600 metre long street that runs from Østerbrogade in the east to Vennemindevej at Kildevæld Church in the east. After 190 metres, the street widens into a small square with a central garden complex, which features a memorial to Frederik Ferdinand Ulrik and Moses Melchior, two of the founders of Arbejdernes Byggeforening. The building society houses give way to taller apartment buildings just before Thomas Laubs Gade.

Street names edit

 
Weysesgade2

The other streets in the Composers' Quarter (apart from Kildevældsgade) are all named after Danish composers:

A couple of neighbouring streets are also named after Nordic composers:

Notable residents edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kildevældskvarteret, Copenhagen Municipality
  2. ^ "Helle Thorning-Schmidt siger endeligt farvel til Danmark" (in Danish). BT. Retrieved 16 December 2018.

External links edit