The Jerusalem Post

Owner says Denmark’s treasured stock exchange will be rebuilt after fire

- • By STINE JACOBSEN and ISABELLE YR CARLSSON

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) – Denmark’s Old Stock Exchange will be rebuilt after the devastatin­g fire that destroyed half the building and damaged the rest, the owner of the Copenhagen landmark said on Wednesday.

Tuesday’s blaze that ripped through the 400-year-old building, toppling its spire in a scene reminiscen­t of the 2019 fire at Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, was still burning in some hard-to-access places more than 24 hours later.

As the flaming spire slammed into the ground, its ornamented metal tip that had sat 52 meters (179 feet) above street level was recovered and will eventually resume its rightful place, said the Danish Chamber of Commerce, which owns the building.

“At six o’clock this morning I met a fireman who gave me this... the top of the stock exchange,” Chamber CEO Brian Mikkelsen told Reuters, holding the metal piece in the air.

“It gives me hope because we have decided to rebuild the stock exchange because it’s part of European history as a trading continent,” he said.

Mikkelsen declined to comment on the building’s insurance policy. The building no longer houses the stock exchange but serves as the Chamber of Commerce headquarte­rs.

A smell of burning hung in

the air on Wednesday while fire fighters on a crane flushed water down into the building through the collapsed roof as smoke still rose from the debris.

A bouquet of sunflowers had been laid in front of the building, which had been undergoing extensive restoratio­n when the fire broke out.

Police investigat­ing the incident said it could take months to determine the cause. No one was hurt in the blaze.

Roughly half the Dutch Renaissanc­e-style building was saved, although massive damage still occurred as fire fighters had drenched it in water.

“Everything that was once part of the story partitions and building structures inside has been burnt away,” Copenhagen

fire department Operations Chief Frank Trier Mikkelsen told Reuters, referring to the part of the building worst hit.

“Only the outer walls remain, leaving an empty shell.”

The loss of the 17th century landmark was a sad moment for the capital, teacher Eva Simoni Lomholdt, 58, told Reuters.

“My first thought was I hope that they rebuild it, it’s never going to be the same but it’s iconic to Copenhagen and Denmark.”

Emergency services were joined by passersby on Tuesday in carrying paintings away from the building shortly after the fire broke out in a race to save historic artifacts

from the flames.

“When the building was on fire yesterday we were saving almost all of the valuables in there. Things that were 300400 years old and part of our national heritage,” the chamber’s Mikkelsen said.

Employees and firefighte­rs knew what to get out as they already had a “worst case” emergency plan in place, he said.

Putting out the fire was taking longer than expected due to lingering pockets of flames found in the rubble and the work was expected to last at least until Thursday morning.

Large containers were being stacked to support damaged walls and prevent the historic brickwork from collapsing.

 ?? (Ritzau Scanpix/Ida Marie Odgaard via Reuters) ?? A HISTORIC PAINTING of the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, is carried away from the burning building in Copenhagen on Tuesday.
(Ritzau Scanpix/Ida Marie Odgaard via Reuters) A HISTORIC PAINTING of the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, is carried away from the burning building in Copenhagen on Tuesday.

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