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New on 500px : One Night in Hamburg by Elstrup by Elstrup

One night in Hamburg – Hafen city – neuer Hafenstadt – the old warehouse area and customs area a great place for history is just around the corner with lots of great designs for a photographer day and night

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New on 500px : The clouds are no restrictions by Elstrup by Elstrup

The clouds are no restrictions – Aalborg Denmark

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New on 500px : Tivoli Hotel Copenhagen by Elstrup by Elstrup

Tivoli Hotel (or Tivoli Hotel & Congress Center) is a hotel in Copenhagen, which opened on 2 September 2010. It is owned and operated by Arp-Hansen Hotel Group. Tivoli Hotel & Congress Center was designed by the Danish architect Kim Utzon, who also designed the nearby hotel WakeUp Copenhagen. The Congress Centre is one of Copenhagen’s largest with capacity for 6000 delegates.

Tivoli Hotel has 679 rooms in addition also fitness facilities, swimming pool, bar, restaurant and indoor and outdoor playground. It was built after the Tivoli did not get permission to build a 102 meter high hotel and apartment building next to City Hall. Tivoli Hotel is at. October 1, 2010 Member of Worldhotels.

The hotel had by just under 400 rooms but was expanded in 2015 with 282 new rooms. In total, the hotel complex incl. Wakeup Copenhagen 1210 rooms

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New on 500px : Dokk1 II by Elstrup by Elstrup

Dokk1 or Dokken is a building and culture center in Aarhus, Denmark. It is situated on Hack Kampmanns Plads in the city center by the waterfront next to the Custom House. The project was jointly financed by Aarhus Municipality and Realdania for 2.1 billion DKK by designs of schmidt hammer lassen architects and Kristine Jensen with construction managed by NCC AB. Construction broke ground 8 June 2011 and it was inaugurated 5 years later on 20 June 2015. In 2015 DOKK1 was awarded a commendation in the category “Cultural Regeneration” at the MIPIM AR Future Projects Awards.
The name of the building was determined by a public contest held in the autumn of 2012. The combination of letters and number can be pronounced as “dokken”, “dok én” or “dok ét”, meaning The dock or Dock One in English. The term references the location on the former industrial harbor by the waterfront

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