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Freewheeling around a culture capital

How else do you get around a city built by students? We saddle up.

November 20, 2014 13:42
20112014 photo 5 (5)

BySandy Rashty, Sandy Rashty

4 min read

A small city has been built in the centre of Aarhus, the up-and-coming but lesser-known cultural capital of Denmark. The student population has been allowed to run riot with creativity, displaying their university art projects, elusive theatre and musical constructs for the 50th anniversary of the ten-day Aarhus Festival - one of the largest cultural events inScandinavia.

Towers of colourful big block seats have been built around an artificial waterfall as shoppers take a seat on The Sofa Experience and listen to jazz musicians play on street corners.

The concert hall has been turned into a live instrument by students at the Aarhus School of Architecture and the Royal Academy Museum. Metal ropes reaching from the pavement to the top of the makeshift scaffolding have been connected to disco lights and over-sized speakers. Passers-by are encouraged to #PlayTheStrings and ping a tune on the ropes as they walk past.

A large mirror installation, called SAME, stands perched on scaffolding above concrete stairs between the concert hall and the Scandanavian Congress Centre, also the brainchild of architecture students. People, walking up or down the staircase, stop to take selfies of the parallel construction.