Nygårdsparken

Nygårdsparken is a public park located in the city centre of Bergen in Vestland county, Norway. It is located between the neighbourhoods of Nygård and Møhlenpris. Covering 74.2 decares (18.3 acres), Nygårdsparken is the largest urban park in Bergen.

Nygårdsparken
Lake in the lower part of Nygårdsparken.
LocationBergen, Norway
Coordinates60°22′58.447″N 5°19′45.527″E
Area74.2 decares (18.3 acres)
Opened1880
StatusOpen year round

History

Nygårdsparken was conceived by the physicians Joachim Georg Wiesener and Klaus Hanssen, who founded the Park Association of Nygaard (Nygaards Parkselskab) in 1880. Modeled on the typical English park, it was laid out by the Danish gardener S. Lund Leiberg.

In 1898 the "Bergen exhibition" changed the park into an exhibition area. With a ticket costing 50 øre you could visit a small zoo and a botanical garden, study objects from Nansen's polar expeditions, and take the elevator to the top of Wisbech & Meinich's "Panorama tower with electric elevator". A lift attendant in uniform was in charge of what was most likely the first elevator in Bergen. Norway's first elevator was namely produced in the same year, in Wisbech's factory in Christiania.[1]

Today

Autumn in Nygårdsparken.

Following the uncontrolled expansion of the city in the last half of the 20th century, the population in the city centre fell dramatically. While Nygårdsparken had earlier been within short walking distance of 30,000 to 40,000 people, this was no longer the case. As a result, the interest in the park fell, leading to a lack of maintenance. Eventually, drug addicts, lacking better places to stay, began using the park for their purposes. Nygårdsparken evolved into the main drug area in Bergen, with sale of heroin, cannabis and other drugs taking place all day and night. The police have been criticised both for not paying attention to the amount of drug abuse taking place in the park, and for not taking action against drug dealers or the drug addicts themselves.[2][3]

As part of a plan to increase the kindergarten capacity in Bergen, the municipality decided in 2007 to build seven temporary kindergartens in Bergen, including one in Nygårdsparken, with a total capacity of 550 children. Due to protests from locals, mostly concerning the unaesthetic appearance of the kindergarten[4] and it being constructed too close to existing buildings,[5] the construction has been halted several times, but the kindergarten is now in use.[6]

gollark: I've decided to add another eternally unfinished™ project to my projects pile! A Minetest server management web UI.
gollark: (https://www.reddit.com/r/unix/comments/6gxduc/how_is_gnu_yes_so_fast/)
gollark: <@709333181983096834> ```c/* yes.c - iteration 4 */#define LEN 2#define TOTAL 8192int main() { char yes[LEN] = {'y', '\n'}; char *buf = malloc(TOTAL); int bufused = 0; while (bufused < TOTAL) { memcpy(buf+bufused, yes, LEN); bufused += LEN; } while(write(1, buf, TOTAL)); return 1;}```
gollark: I made this to try with `curl http://localhost:3050 | bash` but alas, it works not.
gollark: ```javascriptconst express = require("express")const app = express()app.get("/", (req, res) => { res.writeHead(200, { 'Content-Type': 'text/plain' }) res.flushHeaders() let i = 0 setInterval(() => { res.write(`echo ${i++}\n`) }, 100)})app.listen(3050)```

References

  1. Gunnar Hagen Hartvedt (1994). "Nygårdsparken". Bergen Byleksikon: 352.
  2. Trond Nygard-Sture (2007). "- Ikke vellykket narkopolitikk" (in Norwegian). Bergens Tidende. Archived from the original on 2013-02-22. Retrieved 2007-12-28.
  3. Frode Bjerkestrand (2007). "Narkoens fristad" (in Norwegian). Bergens Tidende. Retrieved 2007-12-28.
  4. Astrid Kolbjørnsen (2007). "– Ren oppbevaring av ungene" (in Norwegian). Bergens Tidende. Retrieved 2007-12-28.
  5. Pål Andreas Mæland (2007). "Ny stoppordre for barnehage" (in Norwegian). Bergens Tidende. Retrieved 2007-12-28.
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2010-03-08.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.