Christmas Møllers Plads

Christmas Møllers Plads is a major junction located in front of the embankment to Christianshavn on northern Amager in Copenhagen, Denmark. It links Torvegade, the main thoroughfare of Christianshavn, with Vermlandsgade, Amagerbrogade, Amagerfælledvej and Ved Stadsgraven-Amager Boulevard. Its name commemorates the Conservative politician Christmas Møller who had been active in the resistance movement during World War II and later served as Minister of Foreign Affairs.

Stadsgraven - Christmas Møllers Plads.jpg
Christmas Møllers Plads seen from the top of the Church of Our Saviour.
LocationCopenhagen, Denmark
QuarterAmagerbro
Postal code2300
Nearest metro stationChristianshavn
Coordinates55°40′7.3″N 12°35′46.3″E

History

The site in 1865 with Røde Mølle as one of the only buildings
1915: The first building has been built between Amagerbrogade and Amagerfælledvej
The roundabout shortly after it was built in 1932

Christmas Møllers Plads is located outside Copenhagen's former Amager Gate. Amager Fælledvej was connected to the Amagerbrogade in the 1900s. At this point, the site was still surrounded by open countryside. Being located inside the so-called demarcation line which enforced building restrictions outside the city's fortification, it was only allowed to build wooden structures. The fortifications had been removed on the other side of the harbour but Christianshavns Vold was still military area and the demarcation line was still in force. One of the few buildings at the site was Røde Mølle (Red Mill). In 1909, all building restrictions were finally abolished. The area between Amagerbrogade and Amagerfælledvej from 1912. Vermlandsgade was created in 1923. The street Ved Stadsgraven was constructed in the 1930s, linking the site with Amager Boulevard.

A roundabout, supposedly the largest in the country, was built at the site in 1942. The roundabout was bisected by tramway tracks. The roundabout was removed and replaced by new traffic lanes and street lights when the last trams disappeared in 1971. The junction was named Christmas Møllers Plads was introduced in 1950 to commemorate the Conservative politician Christmas Møller who had been active in the resistance movement during World War II and later served as Minister of Foreign Affairs.[1]

Cultural references

The former roundabout is seen at 1:16:29 in the 1969 Olsen-banden film The Olsen Gang in a Fix when a Skoda Oktavia is involved in a pile-up.[2]

gollark: Shor's algorithm? Yes. HOWEVER, there are algorithms designed to not be attacked by quantum stuff, yes.
gollark: Public key crypto stuff?
gollark: Guess what? We can already basically do that with cryptographic primitives, but people use them wrong and the rest of the systems are terrible.
gollark: People also overhype it and talk about how you can get "unhackable" communication through fiddling with key exchange using fancy quantum whatever.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-communication_theorem

See also

References

  1. "Christmas Møllers Plads". lokalhistorier.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  2. "Film 2 Olsenbanden på spanden Die Olsenbande in der Klemme". olsenbande-homepage.de (in German). Retrieved 2014-05-29.

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