Axelborg , located across the street from Tivoli Gardens on Vesterbrogade in Copenhagen , Denmark, is home to the Danish Agriculture and Food Council. DLG Group is also headquartered in the building. The building was built in 1920 and was originally constructed for a bank. An Irma flagship store opened on the ground floor in 2015 and a Vivalde Café is located on the side that faces Axeltorv .
7-502: Axelborg was constructed as a new headquarters for Den Danske Andelsbank , and construction was completed by 1920. The building was designed by architects Arthur Wittmaack and Vilhelm Hvalsøe . It takes its name from the adjoining square Axeltorv , which had been inaugurated in 1917. Den Danske Andelskasse did not use the entire building. Dansk Andels Gødningsforretning, a cooperative manufacturer of fertilizer founded in Aarhus in 1901,
14-668: The building stands in grey concrete. Danish Agriculture and Food Council is headquartered in the building. DLG has announced that they will be relocating to new headquarters in Fredericia . Part of the building is now used by Tivoli Gardens for special events. An Irma flagship store opened on the ground floor in 2015 and a Vivaldi Café is located in the ground floor on the side that faces Axeltorv. 55°40′31″N 12°33′52″E / 55.6754°N 12.5644°E / 55.6754; 12.5644 Arthur Wittmaack Arthur Carl Johann Wittmaack (2 June 1878 – 30 October 1965)
21-665: The later works were representative of functionalism . He exhibited at Charlottenborg Spring Exhibition (1917), at Stockholm (1918) and at the Brussels International Exposition (1935) . He also exhibited in Oslo , Berlin , Paris and the Netherlands . He was married in 1910 with Emilie Katarine Wittmaack (1884-1974). He died during 1965 in the United States. This article about
28-567: The radio relocated there in 1931. Since then, the building has been occupied by the Danish Agricultural Council ( Landbrugsraadet ), in 2009 renamed Landbrug & Fødevarer (Danish Agriculture and Food Council). The building was expanded between 1961 and 1965. The five-storey building is constructed in brick. The building has rustication on the ground floor and arched openings along the two sides. The four upper floors stand dressed masonry and has wide pilasters between
35-399: The windows. The roof features a three-bay belvedere , topped by a balustrade , with views of Tivoli Gardens on the other side of the street. The main entrance is flanked by two wall-mounted lanterns and the keystone above the main entrance features a relief of a nude woman. The building has a central rotunda which is topped by a large, domed lantern. The 1950s extension on the rear side of
42-519: Was a Danish architect. His work was part of the architecture event in the art competition at the 1928 Summer Olympics . Wittmaack was born in Malmø , Sweden. He was the son of Johannes Wittmaack and Adamine Petersen. Wittmaack studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna from 1899-1900. He joined the firm of Vilhelm Hvalsøe from 1916. His earliest designs were of Neoclassical architecture , while
49-489: Was from July 1920 also headquartered in the building. In 1928, the Danish Broadcasting Corporation (founded in 1925) relocated to rented rooms in the building, but the need for more suitable facilities with proper broadcasting studios and a concert hall for the new radio symphony orchestra soon became evident. Consequently, a new building, Stærekassen , was constructed on Kongens Nytorv and
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