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september 2009.pdf - CBS OBSERVER

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4 2<br />

As a student at <strong>CBS</strong>, you won’t be<br />

able to escape cyclists. They are<br />

everywhere around town and especially<br />

around Campus, where no<br />

one seems to know how to park<br />

them considerately. There are good<br />

reasons for that – good enough to<br />

rather join them than beat them as<br />

they speed their crazy, anarchistic<br />

way through Copenhagen’s traffic.<br />

North to Nørrebro<br />

This city is for cyclists. One of the<br />

city’s most used cycle-routes, a part<br />

of Copenhagen’s and Frederiksberg’s<br />

40 kilometres of green cycle routes,<br />

even runs right through <strong>CBS</strong>’<br />

Campus. The only thing you have<br />

to decide is whether to go north or<br />

south from Solbjerg Plads.<br />

If you go past the Frederiksberg<br />

Center and cross Falkoner Allé at<br />

the traffic lights, you are on your<br />

way on the northern part of an<br />

inner green cycle route. If you are<br />

really not used to cycling, as little<br />

as five minutes on your bike later<br />

you will find your first opportunity<br />

to take a break in the beautiful<br />

park and greenhouse café of LIFE,<br />

the University of Copenhagen’s<br />

Faculty of Life Sciences on the right<br />

of the bike lane.<br />

If this is too soon for you to<br />

pause, continue and you will not<br />

only pass a small mid-city farm<br />

on your right after you have<br />

crossed Rolighedsvej but also<br />

i n - h o u s e n e w s p a p e r f o r co p e n h a g e n b u s i n e s s s c h o o l<br />

How to go green all over Copenhagen<br />

Welcome to <strong>CBS</strong>. Welcome to Copenhagen. If you thought this article was about where to go and drink yourself sick, you<br />

were wrong. Now – go buy a bike! Autumn may be windy and wet, winter may be dark and cold and public transport may be<br />

easy and almost affoardable, but still. Even if you haven’t cycled since you were five: get a bike! Here’s why<br />

p e d a l p o w e r<br />

By Alexandra Bode<br />

Photos: Lajka Hollesen<br />

There are many ways to experience the waterfront of Copenhagen, be it on<br />

foot or bicycle, in a kayak or a touring boat or – as here - a rented boat.<br />

Hans Christian Andersen’s grave in<br />

Assistens Kirkegaard (Nørrebro’s<br />

cemetery cum local park) – if you<br />

make a small detour and turn right<br />

at Jagtvej, that is.<br />

Bike on and enjoy<br />

Nørrebroparken with its sunbathers,<br />

ball players and spontaneous<br />

barbecues. When you arrive at<br />

Tagensvej, turn left and cross the<br />

bridge to turn right just after it.<br />

Here the green cycle route continues<br />

through parks and residential<br />

areas and leads you right up to<br />

Ryparken S-train station.<br />

Alternatively you can bike up<br />

the hill to the huge yellow brick<br />

church, Grundtvigskirken. From<br />

there you can turn right and, if<br />

you’re really good, find a not yet<br />

official green cycle route first running<br />

downhill through a number<br />

of stiles and then following a small<br />

canal through a variety of residential<br />

areas, ending up just short of<br />

Ikea on Lyngbyvejen.<br />

South to Søndermarken<br />

The other half of this green cycle<br />

route runs across <strong>CBS</strong>’ Solbjerg Plads<br />

Campus, passing Kilen and one of<br />

the city’s first bike counters. While<br />

the route basically just continues<br />

down to Danshøj S-train station, a<br />

worthwhile detour is to stop and<br />

visit Frederiksberg Have, the Zoo and<br />

Søndermarken, which is a bit more<br />

fields and woodsy than Frederiksberg<br />

Have’s very park-like park.<br />

Biking the waterfront<br />

Sightseeing by bike might seem an<br />

One of your detours could be Nyhavn, where <strong>CBS</strong> <strong>OBSERVER</strong>s reporter (picture<br />

left) has made a pit stop.<br />

inconvenient and frequent mapconsulting<br />

kind of thing, especially<br />

when there are boats taking<br />

you to most of the major sights.<br />

However, there is one route that<br />

is so easy you shouldn’t miss out<br />

on it. Starting at Copenhagen’s<br />

most famous landmark, the statue<br />

of The Little Mermaid, it leads you<br />

past Copenhagen’s oldest and newest<br />

bits – all you have to do cycle<br />

south along the waterfront and<br />

enjoy.<br />

After waving at The Little<br />

Mermaid your next encounter will<br />

be nearby Gefion, depicted in the<br />

fountain of the same name – the<br />

goddess Gefion transformed her<br />

four sons into oxen and then<br />

ploughed up earth into the sea<br />

between the Danish isle of Funen<br />

and Sweden, creating Zealand, the<br />

island on which Copenhagen is<br />

There is no excuse. If<br />

you want to experience<br />

Copenhagen you must<br />

get a bike.<br />

located.<br />

The route then goes through the<br />

harbor toll-house gates, and on<br />

your waterfront way to the royal<br />

residences, you will meet someone<br />

you thought lived in Florence: In<br />

front of the Royal Cast Collection,<br />

which holds casts of some of the<br />

most important sculptures in the<br />

world, stands a bronze replica of<br />

Michelangelo’s David. And then you<br />

get to Amalienborg Palace with the<br />

Marble Church on one side and the<br />

Royal Opera House on the other<br />

side of the harbor on one visual<br />

axis.<br />

The next stage on your tour goes<br />

around Copenhagen’s new Royal<br />

Playhouse, overlooking the harbor<br />

and just around the corner from<br />

buzzing Nyhavn. Here, the little<br />

detour you have to take in order to<br />

get over the bridge is well worth it

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