Listed buildings in Nørrebro

This list of listed buildings in Nørrebro lists listed buildings and structures in the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, Denmark.

List

Listing name Image Location Coordinates Summary
Ahornsgade 15-19Ahornsgade 15, 2200 København N55°41′29.77″N 12°33′34.62″EApartment building and workshop building from 1886 and the cobbled courtyard[1]
Ahornsgade 17, 2200 København N55°41′30.29″N 12°33′33.86″EApartment building from 1886 and the cobbled courtyard[2]
Assistens CemeteryKapelvej 2, 2200 København N55°41′27.61″N 12°32′57.25″EThe wall on Kapelvej (1760 and 1881), Nørrebrogade (1760 and 1806), Nørrebros Runddel (1806) and Jagtvej (1831) as well as metalwork, gates and internal walls[3]
Assistens Cemetery: The Gravedigger's HouseNørrebrogade 67, 2200 København N55°41′36.57″N 12°32′56.29″EThe residence for the gravedigger at the cemetery, built in 1805 by Jens Bang[4]
Blågårds PladsBlågårds Plads 0, 2200 København N55°41′10.96″N 12°33′25.75″EPublic space from 1915 designe by Ivar Bentson with integrated sculptures by Kai Nielsen[5]
Ewaldsgade 5Ewaldsgade 5, 2200 København N55°40′58.93″N 12°33′28.61″EFormer home of the architect Niels Sigfred Nebelong, built in 1853 to his own design[6]
Ewaldsgade 7-9Ewaldsgade 9, 2200 København N55°40′57.58″N 12°33′27.32″ENo. 9 is a house from 1858 designed by Johan Daniel Herholdt; No. 7 is a house from 1863 built by master mason Johan Jacob Deuntzer and rebuilt in 1944[7]
Fælledvej 4Fælledvej 4, 2200 København N1921Three-winged residential building in te yard from 1921 designed by H. P. N. Hedemann with internal decorations by Robert Storm Petersen[8]
Holger Petersen's Textile Factory (2)Tagensvej 85C, 2200 København N18998Industrial complex consisting of a small building from 1883 by Johan Schrøder attached to a combined office and storage building from 1888[9]
Holger Petersen's Textile Factory: Workers' housingTagensvej 83B, 2200 København N1885Workers' housing from 1885 designed by Carl Thorning[10]
Hornbækhus (3)Borups Allé 5, 7 and 23, 2200 København N123Large residential block from 1923 designed by Kay Fisker with courtyard garden complex by G. N. Brandt[11]
Kaffebrænderiet MerkurHermodsgade 24, 2200 København N1858Coffee roaster from 1932 designed by Carl Servais[12]
LinoleumshusetÅboulevard 84, 2200 København N1931Apartment block from 1931 designed Povl Baumann and notable for its patterned brickwork[13]
Jewish Northern CemeteryMøllegade 12, 2200 København NJewish cemetery from 1694 with monuments and headstones as well as the residence and tall walls on Møllegade, Guldbergsgade and Birkegade from 1873 designed by Vilhelm Tvede[14]
Nørrebro stationFolmer Bendtsens Plads 17, 2200 København N1930Functionalist railway station from 1930 designed by K.T. Seest[15]
Rud. RasmussenNørrebrogade 45A, 2200 København N1895Combined residential and industrial complex from 1895 with a still operating furniture workshop[16]
Nørrebrogade 45A, 2200 København N1895Combined residential and industrial complex from 1895 with a still operating furniture workshop[17]
Nørrebrogade 45A, 2200 København N1895Combined residential and industrial complex from 1895 with a still operating furniture workshop[18]
ZøllnerhusGormsgade 2A, 2200 København N1936Three-winged apartment complex from 1936 designed by Charles I. Schou and Erik Kragh,with verenda, yard, parking facility and bicycle ramp on its rear side[19]
gollark: The barometers probably aren't very *accurate*, generally.
gollark: I have an app which tells me which satellites it's using.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: In any case, they have perfectly functional GPS receiver hardware which can also use cell towers.
gollark: SOme of them.

References

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