Daily News

Inferno guts historic landmark

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A HUGE fire yesterday devastated Copenhagen’s 17th-century former stock exchange, toppling the historic building’s landmark spire in front of horrified witnesses.

The 54m spire disappeare­d into flames at the Borsen building, which had been undergoing renovation.

“This is our Notre-dame! This is a national treasure,” said emotional local resident, 45-year-old Elisabeth Moltke, as she watched the blaze.

“A lot of old Danish paintings, originals are in there. I’ve been in there several times and it’s a magnificen­t building so it makes me feel very emotional.”

The fire started under the red-brick building’s copper roof, emergency services told reporters, as more than a hundred firefighte­rs were dispatched to the scene.

The spire snapped and crashed down on to the street below. Dramatic photograph­s showed orange flames and huge plumes of black smoke billowing from the rooftop.

Fire trucks surrounded the building, covered in scaffoldin­g and wrapped in tarp and which today houses the

Danish Chamber of Commerce. It lies just a stone’s throw from the country’s Parliament and seat of government Christians­borg.

“It’s a copper roof, and it’s simply impossible to get under that roof, so the fire has plenty of time to build intensity,” Jakob Vedsted Andersen, director of emergency services, told news agency Ritzau, adding that the fire had spread down into the building.

The Borsen building, commission­ed by King Christian IV and built between 1619 and 1640, is one of Copenhagen’s oldest and best known landmarks.

Housing a vast art collection, it was being renovated to celebrate its 400th anniversar­y. “Terrifying images from Borsen this morning. 400 years of Danish cultural heritage going up in flames,” Culture Minister Jakob Engelschmi­dt wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

The images recalled the disaster at Notre-dame Cathedral in Paris, almost five years ago to the day it was gutted by a fire. Onlookers could not hold back tears as they watched the devastatio­n.

“I’m lost for words … It’s a 400-yearold building that has survived all the other fires that burnt Copenhagen down to the ground,” said Carsten Lundberg, an employee at the Danish Chamber of Commerce.

“It’s a dreadful loss,” Lundberg said, adding that what was inside were “things that you cannot put a price on … Priceless paintings, statues … ”

Engel-schmidt said he had been moved to see employees, rescue workers and residents working to “rescue art treasures and iconic paintings from the

burning building”. Images from the scene showed several people rescuing works of art, including a painting of the building.

Forces from the Danish military were also called to the scene, in particular to try to evacuate artworks.

“We are currently working hard to save our historical art from Borsen,” the Chamber of Commerce said in a post on X.

Police said they had blocked off parts of the city centre as part of the fire-fighting efforts.

 ?? | Reuters ?? SMOKE billows following a fire at the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, in Copenhagen, Denmark, yesterday.
| Reuters SMOKE billows following a fire at the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, in Copenhagen, Denmark, yesterday.

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