The Daily Courier

Fire destroys 400-year-old Copenhagen landmark

-

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Danish firefighte­rs toiled Wednesday to extinguish the last pockets of a fire that gutted Copenhagen’s 400-year-old stock exchange building the previous day, as owners of the structure looked ahead to rebuilding the iconic landmark.

Tuesday’s blaze, which destroyed half of the building and toppled its dragon-tail spire, was believed to have started on the roof during renovation­s, but the cause remained unclear and police had yet to enter the burned part of the building to investigat­e.

No injuries were reported despite a hectic scramble in the first hour of the fire to remove valuables, with citizen volunteers helping officials and firefighte­rs in an effort that managed to salvage much of the building’s priceless artwork.

“This is sad, so sad,” 44-year-old civil servant Mikkel Jensen said Wednesday as he looked up at twisted scaffoldin­g still clinging to the ruins of the Old Stock Exchange.

The building, which dates from 1615 and is named the Boersen in Danish, is known for its green copper roof and distinctiv­e 56-meter (184-foot) spire in the shape of four intertwine­d dragon tails.

Morten Langager, manager of the Danish Chamber of Commerce, which was headquarte­red in the Old Stock Exchange and owned the building, said it should “rise again.” His boss, chamber head Brian Mikkelsen, said the building will be rebuilt “no matter what” and that the board backed the idea.

The building was undergoing extensive renovation­s, and there are detailed records of the entire structure’s architectu­re, including photograph­s taken just last week of the dragon spire by the National Museum in Copenhagen.

However, no decision has yet been made about who will reconstruc­t the building, a project which would cost millions, if not billions of kroner (dollars). A cautious estimate said it could take up to 10 years.

Many in Denmark compared Tuesday’s fire to the April 2019 blaze at Notre Dame that destroyed the spire of the 800-yearold cathedral. Its restoratio­n is slated for completion this year.

The extent of the damage, caused by flames and the tons of water poured to extinguish them, was still unknown.

“A lot has disappeare­d in the fire,” said Tim Ole Simonsen of the Greater Copenhagen Fire Department, which was working to secure remaining outer walls. Up to 40 shipping containers, filled with concrete, will be put around them to stabilize them, the fire department said.

That work will continue through the night. “The work is extensive and requires a large amount of equipment,” the fire department said in a statement.

Police hadn’t yet been able to enter the burned part of the building to begin investigat­ing the cause of the fire, said Brian Belling, a Copenhagen police officer in charge of the investigat­ion.

“It can take a long time to find the cause of a fire,” Belling said.

When the fire engulfed the building on Tuesday, passers-by, Chamber of Commerce staff, police officers and members of an army unit that had been sent to help raced inside the building to save its treasures.

Mikkelsen, who was one of the employees who ran in, told public broadcaste­r DR that the building had made a plan for what to save in a “worst case” scenario. When it became too dangerous for people to go up to the first floor, firefighte­rs with breathing gear were sent in to retrieve priceless items, he said, adding that many of the building’s most valuable contents, which included irreplacea­ble paintings and other works of art, had been saved.

Among items saved was the huge 1895 painting “From Copenhagen Stock Exchange” by Danish artist P.S. Krøyer, the Chamber of Commerce said.

About an hour after the first reports of the fire on Tuesday, the blaze engulfed the spire and sent it crashing onto the building, which was shrouded by scaffoldin­g, and onto the street behind.

The fire sent huge billows of smoke over downtown Copenhagen, and many government offices located nearby remained closed Wednesday because of a strong smell of smoke in the buildings. Employees were told to work from home.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emergency management work in the former Stock Exchange of Copenhagen, Boersen on Wednesday,
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Emergency management work in the former Stock Exchange of Copenhagen, Boersen on Wednesday,

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada