Belfast Telegraph

Blaze: Fire rages through historic building in Copenhagen

- By Associated Press Reporters

ONE of Copenhagen’s oldest buildings is on fire and its famous spire has collapsed.

The fire that began yesterday in the copper roof of the 17th-century Old Stock Exchange, or Boersen, has now spread to much of the building, and parts of the roof have also collapsed, said firefighte­rs’ spokesman Jakob Vedsted Andersen.

The fire was first reported at 7.30am.

“The extinguish­ing work is very difficult,” said Mr Vedsted Andersen, adding that there are parts of the building that the firefighte­rs cannot enter because it is too dangerous.

The building, that was once Denmark’s financial centre and is situated 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 entwined together, reached a height of 56 metres (184 feet).

Huge billows of smoke rose over downtown Copenhagen and people were seen rushing inside the building to save paintings. Danish media reported that an annex of the parliament was being evacuated.

Police and firefighte­rs were at work outside the building, which was encased in scaffoldin­g. Ambulances were at the scene but there were no reports of casualties. Members of an army unit were seen being deployed to cordon off the area, and the Danish Emergency Management Agency was also helping.

Danish culture minister Jakon Engel-schmidt said it was “touching” to see how passers-by helped emergency services “to save art treasures and iconic images from the burning building”.

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 Danish Chamber of Commerce which moved into the building after Copenhagen’s stock exchange left in 1974.

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

Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n wrote that “a piece of Danish history is on fire”.

“It hurts to see,” Ms Frederikse­n wrote on Instagram.

The cause of the fire has not yet been disclosed.

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