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Fire engulfs historic Copenhagen Stock Exchange

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One of Copenhagen’s oldest buildings went up in ames on Tuesday.

The blaze caused the 17thcentur­y Old Stock Exchange to collapse, as passersby rushed to help emergency services save priceless paintings and other valuables.

Danish Culture Minister Jakob Engel-Schmidt said it was “touching” to see how many people lent their hand “to save art treasures and iconic images from the burning building.”

One man jumped o his bicycle on his way to work to help.

Brian Mikkelsen, chief of the Danish Chamber of Commerce, headquarte­red in the Old Stock Exchange, and his sta scrolled through an index of paintings to be saved.

The works were carried to the nearby parliament and Danish National Archives around the corner.

“We have been able to rescue a lot,” a visibly moved Mikkelsen told reporters. “It is a national disaster.”

He also helped save valuables from the inferno, with rescuers using tools including a crowbar to remove them.

The re began Tuesday morning on the copper roof of the Old Stock Exchange, also known as the Boersen.

Flames spread through the building and roof, parts of which also collapsed.

The historic building's interior was also destroyed, said re ghters spokesman Jakob Vedsted Andersen.

“The re is still not under control,” Andersen said, adding that half the building was destroyed and collapsed.

He said there was no risk of the blaze spreading to other buildings.

Fire ghters said they expected to be at the scene for the next 24 hours.

Tommy Laursen of the Copenhagen police said it was too early to say what caused the blaze and that they would be able to enter the building in “a few days.”

Fire ghters were seen spraying water through the doorway of the Old Stock Exchange’s gilded hall, used for gala dinners, conference­s and other events and where many paintings hung.

The building, next to the Christians­borg Palace where the parliament sits, is a popular tourist attraction. Its distinctiv­e spire, in the shape of the tails of four dragons twined together, reached a height of 56 metres.

Huge billows of smoke rose over downtown Copenhagen and could be seen from southern Sweden, which is separated by a narrow waterway.

Ambulances were at the scene but there were no reports of casualties. A spokesman for the company working on renovating the building said the carpenters who worked on the roof had all come out.

Up to 90 members of an army unit were deployed from a nearby base to cordon o the area and “secure valuables," Denmark's armed forces said.

King Frederik wrote on Instagram that “they woke up to a sad sight” of “an important part of our architectu­ral heritage” being destroyed.

Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n wrote on Instagram that it hurt to see that “irreplacea­ble cultural heritage” and ”a piece of Danish history is on re.”

The building and the spire had been encased in sca olding.

The roof, masonry, sandstone and spire of Boersen - built in 1615 and considered a leading example of Dutch Renaissanc­e style in Denmark - was being renovated, said the Chamber of Commerce, which moved into the building after Copenhagen's stock exchange left in 1974.

The chamber owns the building.

Mikkelsen said they had planned to have the royal family, the Danish government and other dignitarie­s see the Old Stock Exchange after the renovation later this year.

“That won’t happen now,” he said.

It was unclear what will happen to the iconic building.

Engel-Schmidt, the culture minister, wrote on X “I will do everything I can so that the dragon spire will once again tower over Copenhagen.”

He said it had been “a symbol of Denmark’s strong history as a trading nation.”

The adjacent Christians­borg Palace has burned down on several occasions. Most recently in 1990 a re broke out in an annex of the Danish parliament, known as Proviantga­arden. However, the Old Stock Exchange was unscathed.

That annexe, which lies in the block behind the Old Stock Exchange, was evacuated as a precaution, as were ministries in the street behind the burning building.

Police said on the social media platform X that a main road in Copenhagen was closed and people should expect the area to be cordoned o for some time.

Several bus lines were rerouted and Danish media reported huge tra c jams.

Queen Margrethe, who turned 84 Tuesday, toned down the celebratio­ns because of the re, broadcaste­r TV2 said.

A band with the Royal Life Guard was to play for the former monarch outside the Fredensbor­g Castle, where she is staying for the spring and summer, but that was cancelled.

 ?? ?? Smoke rise out of the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, April 16, 2024.
Smoke rise out of the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, April 16, 2024.

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