Bragesgade

Bragesgade is a street in the Outer Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, Denmark. It runs from Nørrebrogade in the southwest to Nannasgade in the northeast. It is located in the so-called Mimersgade Quarter where many of the streets are named after Norse figures and localities. It is named afterBrage (Bragi). Nørrebrohallen's main entrance is located in the street.

Bragesgade
Length350 m (1,150 ft)
LocationCopenhagen, Denmark
QuarterNørrebro
Postal code2200
Nearest metro stationNørrebro station
Coordinates55°41′59.06″N 12°32′38.65″E
Southwest endNørrebrogade
Northeast endNannasgade

History

P. Jørgensens "Dan" Motorfabriker

The street was given its name in 1889. It then ended at Rosagade (now Mimersgade) but it was later extended to Nannasgade.[1]

A complex of carriagehouses and workshops for the trams was constructed on the north side of the northwest side of the street in1898. It was later extended several times, for instance with its own substation in 1914.[1]

Several industrial enterprises were also built in the street. Brdr. Henzes Skrueboltefabrik was located at No. 8 but moved when a new plant on Strandlodsvej in Amager was inaugurated in the 1940s.[2] Peter Jørgensens motorfabrik "Dan", the first Danish manufacturer of petroleum engines, opened at No. 10 in around 1910. It relocated to Herlev in 1953.[3]

Notable Buildings and places

Kingo's Church

Nørrebrohallen, located in the former remisse complex, is operated as a local culture and sports centre. The main building from 1898 was extended on a number of occasions, for instance in 1902 by Vilhelm Friederichsen.

Manufakturhandlerforeningens stiftelse

Kingo's Church (No. 25), on the corner with Nannasgade, was built in 1910. The National Romantic building was designed by Kristoffer Varming.

Manufakturhandlerforeningens Stiftelse (No. 26A), located opposite Kingo's Church, was also built in 1909. The building was designed by Valdemar and Bernhard Ingemann.

Transport

The southwestern end of the street is located approximately 430 metres from Nørrebro station and some 600 metres from Nørrebrosrunddel. The northeastern end of the street is located approximately 340 metres from Skjolds Plads.

gollark: What? I did ages ago.
gollark: In case of my death, control of my github account goes to a GPT finetuned on my code and Discord messages.
gollark: I actually once won a chess game.
gollark: Fine, submerge the entire room in superglue.
gollark: Why are you using knots and not duct tape? In general.

See also

References

  1. "Bragesgade". hovedstadshistorie.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  2. "Brødrene Henze's Skruebolte- & Møtrikfabrik. Bragesgade 8, Kbh. N." fotohistorie.com (in Danish). Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  3. "Motorfabrikken Dan/P. Jørgensen". motorsamlingen.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 13 October 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.