How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers

On October last year, we published an article, How Independent Scandinavian Hotels Can Compete With International Hotel Chains in Attracting Chinese Visitors, written by Cho Wong, managing director, Compass Edge Europe. Since then, we have interviewed Mr. Wong, to add more useful information to interested hoteliers. Find out more about how individual Scandinavian hotels can benefit from a stream of Chinese travelers.

Before the pandemic, outbound travel from China reached record numbers. Now, Chinese travelers are impatiently waiting for borders to open again, and worldwide destinations will once again try to reach these people. But how?

Cho Wong was born in Hong Kong and completed his graduate and post-graduate education in the UK. His first job was to introduce western technology into China. “How things have changed and now China is exporting technology!” he smiles.

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers
Cho Wong has workes in the hospitality industry since early 2000s

Later, he lived in Singapore for 4 years setting up a regional head office for a UK packaging manufacturer, followed by running a Sino-British factory in Kunming, Yunnan Province. His first involvement in the hospitality industry was being the head of a hotel booking agency in early 2000s.

Since the he has stayed in the industry, first with Pegasus Solutions, and subsequently became Managing Director of Supranational Hotels, a hotel representation company which was well known in Scandinavia. At that time Rica Hotels, Arp-Hanson Hotel and Restel Hotels were counted among its membership.

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers
In 2015, Anita Chan, CEO of Compass Edge, realized that the number of Chinese outbound travelers were increasing and yet they could not find much information about hotels in the west

The Compass Edge History
Cho retired in late 2017 but was persuaded by one of his customers Anita Chan, CEO of Compass Edge, to form a partnership in the UK, promoting her GoChina services to hoteliers in Europe. Compass Edge in Hong Kong was founded by Anita Chan in 2008. With an extensive experience from her hotel and hotel representation background (VP of Small Luxury Hotels), Anita and her team’s main business is to represent independent hotels and regional hotel groups in GDS distribution. OTA connectivity, booking engines and so on.

In 2015, Anita realized that the number of Chinese outbound travelers were increasing and yet they could not find much information about hotels in the west. Part of that is due to the Great Firewall which restricts information going in and part of it is due to western hotels not knowing how to market themselves properly inside China.

 

 

Anita started offering China Strategy services to overseas hotels and GoChina is the main service including building China-specific websites and hosting them inside China, using Chinese social media and the latest marketing channels there to help hotels build up their brands.

“Naturally, there is a need here in Europe and therefore Anita and I set up Compass Edge Europe to offer the GoChina service to hoteliers here,” says Cho.

Where does the typical Chinese traveler get information on a specific destination?
How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers
“There is a need here in Europe and therefore Anita and I set up Compass Edge Europe to offer the GoChina service to hoteliers here,” says Cho

A specific destination can be known to Chinese travelers via the traditional way such as:

  • Travel programs on Chinese Television
  • Travel magazines

However, to be effective, it is now mainly through:

  • Social media and active engagement with audience by using the two most important social media channels in China, namely Weibo and WeChat and set up accounts there (Visit Britain is a good example); using posts regularly to “sell” the destination
  • Gaining traction via KOLs (Key Opinion Leaders) talking about their travelling experience and recommending what to see, eat, shop and stay.

In addition, typical Chinese travelers also get information from friends and relatives through their social media posts during and after their trips.

What is most important for the typical individual Chines traveler?

Years ago, it was about visiting well know foreign destinations such as London, Paris and New York. They called it “clocking in”, i.e. posting their selfies using famous landmarks as backdrops. Also shopping!

For seasoned travelers, it is now about experience. This is not just about the hotel stay but also about what they can see and learn when they are there. For example, it is important to know what they can do to enhance themselves (such as learning wine tasting organized by the hotel, preparing cocktails, learning how to cook with the head chefs). For some people, going to less well-known destinations mean meeting less fellow Chinese travelers which they prefer. Hence chasing northern lights in Iceland, cruising in the Antarctic has become popular among the well-offs.

Under the Covid-19 shadows, the most important factor for them now is safety. This includes the hygiene regime offered by hotels (contactless checking-in and out, enhanced room service, social distanced restaurants, good health care system in place in case of need etc.)

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers

What is the best way for a small hotel owner to market a destination to the Chinese market?

The best way is to identify their unique selling points and tell the market about them (why one should visit the place, what you will miss if you don’t, things you can see, smell and feel that cannot be replicated by just looking at photos or videos)!

You are right that a Chinese traveler does not come to stay at a small hotel because he or she loves the hotel (this comes afterwards, hopefully..).

Are there any historical stories about the destination? Any famous people from there? Is the hotel near any World Heritage Sites or UNESCO destinations? Is there a local cuisine, wine, special cooking methods, other unique local activities that visitors will find interesting?

It will be beneficial if hotels can also take part in their local tourism board’s promotion activities targeting China.

Related: Stories From a Young Norwegian’s Stay in China

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers
Cho Wong doing a presentation
How important will you say the Scandinavian market is to Chinese travelers?

Scandinavia is fascinating to the Chinese, especially the story of Father Christmas (a relatively new concept to them), Lapland, the Northern Lights, the midnight sun and so on.

In addition, because of the pollution in China, they long for visiting places famous for clean air and nature.

Luckily, the region is not yet a destination for the mass market which is good news to the host countries as well as the more well-off travelers from China.

Any thoughts about language barriers?

Most independent Chinese travelers speak some English. Also, there are now Apps on their mobile phones acting as interpreters and most Scandinavians can speak English anyway and therefore language barrier is not a problem.

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers
Food is one of the most important enjoyment in life for the Chinese. Above, Chinese tourists in Helsinki. Photo: Kai Jaskari/YLE
How important is food?

Food is one of the most important enjoyment in life for the Chinese. The four factors forming their travel experience are eat, play, sleep and shop. In the past, they would like to stick with Chinese food but now, especially with the younger generation, they want to experience local food and cuisine. Norwegian salmons, Danish smørrebrød shrimp open sandwiches, Finnish reindeer steak and so on are known to them and they would like to try the real thing.

How can a Scandinavian company be visible on Internet in China?

In order to make sure that it is visible on internet in China, a Scandinavian company will have to do the following:

  • Check whether their corporate website is visible in China;
  • If so, how about the speed (it takes about 33 seconds to download a European website inside China due to internet filtering by the government there, which is far too long);
  • Consider building a China specific website, in Chinese, with a “.cn” domain and have it hosted inside China;
  • Set up their Weibo account to start engaging with their target audience;
  • If it is useful, set up their WeChat official account as well;
  • Consider using other Chinese social media channels and video sharing channels such as DouYin (TickTok) to engage the younger generation.
How does your company help clients in Europe to market their destinations in China?

First of all, we do a check to see whether our potential clients are “visible” inside China.

At the same time, we work with them to pinpoint their USPs, prepare and build their Chinese websites, obtain the “.cn” domains and host their websites on Alibaba cloud for them.

As part of the GoChina package, we set up their Weibo accounts in China. Normally for independent hotels, it may not be cost effective to have a WeChat Official Account. However, if it is a big hotel group or a destination tourism board, a WeChat Account may then be useful.

how individual Scandinavian hotels can benefit from a stream of Chinese travelers
Marketing destinations require commitment in terms of regular posts to engage with the audience, checking on trends and matching the trends with information on destinations such as the most popular events, festivals, food of the season, and anything that can enhance travelers’ experience and their impression of the places.

One important element is to deploy KOLs (Key Opinion Leaders) or what we call Influencers in the west). KOLs, and now KOCs (Key Opinion Consumers) are very popular and they have a huge number of followers. Their efforts in promoting these destinations by visiting there and filming will be widely noticed and will increase the popularity. Some of them have their own photographers taking pictures of the landscapes, things the KOLs do while they are there, talking with locals and so on.

Last but not least, live streaming is now making a big impact and a well-known local chef cooking a signature dish via on live streaming will no doubt attract attention and following.

In addition, we should not forget the importance of off-line marketing. Taking part in trade shows and exhibitions in China where you can meet potential customers are equally important.

Combination of the above will make sure that the destinations are on top of visitors’ lists during their inspiration and planning phases.

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers
Daily Scandinavian and Compass Edge Europe using the strategies and tactics mentioned above can attract Chinese visitors
How can a content provider like Daily Scandinavian attract Chinese visitors? 

A content provider can consider using the strategies and tactics mentioned above in order to attract Chinese visitors. The beauty of a content provider such as Daily Scandinavian is the vast amount of information and data about various places of interests, things to do, choices of restaurants, hotels accommodation, festivals, changes of seasons. The question is how to communicate all this information to the audience effectively and making sure that they use this provider as one of their preferred channels to search for information.

Having said that, Rome was not built in a day and therefore commitment and continuous efforts are required.

Can you give me any examples of success stories from our region?

Hotel Helka in Helsinki is in a very good location. They provide a 4-star service and yet the room rates are very competitive. However, they have Japanese guests and they would love to attract Chinese guests. Through our join efforts, they have seen good results.

We have also helped Zleep Hotels to test the market.

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers
“Consistency is the name of the game which requires commitment of manpower and resources,” says Cho Wong
Why a lot of hotels or destinations fail
Cho Lee would also like to point out why a lot of hotels or destinations fail, even after a lot of money has been spent targeting the Chinese market.

“First, it is not enough to have their websites translated into Chinese and think that people will find them. I mentioned the Great Firewall before. Google is banned in China and Baidu is the number one search engine there.

Second, the layout of these websites may not be the format that the Chinese prefer.

Third, having a Weibo and even a WeChat account does not necessarily mean people will read your posts. There are too many accounts there fighting for eyeballs.

Fourth, branding is everything in China. It needs constant nurturing and therefore posting once a week on social media is not enough. Equally, a period of hyper activities followed by a period of “hibernation” does not help either. Consistency is the name of the game which requires commitment of manpower and resources.”

How individual Scandinavian hotels can benefit from a stream of Chinese travelers credits:

How Individual Scandinavian Hotels Can Benefit from a Stream of Chinese Travelers, Cho Wong, managing director Compass Edge Europe was interviewed by Tor Kjolberg.

All images © Compass Edge Europe, except where stated otherwise.

Feature image (on top): Photo by Marco Xu / Unsplash

Interpretations of Norway’s Most Famous Painting

As part of the move into the new National Museum in Norway’s capital, Edvard Munch’s world- famous painting “The Scream” is now preserved and studied by conservators. Read more about the interpretations of Norway’s most famous painting.

The Scream, painted by Edvard Munch in 1893, is one of the most famous paintings in the world and has been the source of countless parodies and referred to as The Cry, it has also been referenced to horror movies. The bright swirling sky and its expressionistic colors is a mysterious subject in itself, but why is the person screaming?

Interpretations of Norway’s Most Famous Painting
Edvard Munch, self portrait

Munch’s early life was a tragic affair. His mother died for tuberculosis when he was five, followed soon by his sister. Another sister was diagnosed with a serious mental illness, forcing her to live in a psychiatric institution, the father suffered manic-depressive disorders and his brother died a few months after getting married. Edvard Munch said: “I inherited two of mankind’s most frightful enemies, consumption and insanity.”

Related: The New National Museum in Oslo

All art is open to interpretation and as an artefact of ‘high’ culture, The Scream is seen as great work of art and has as a cultural product been widely referenced and reproduced. During recent conservation and research, however, new information has emerged about Edvard Munch’s world-famous motif. In the red sky, for example, there is an inscription “Can only be painted by a crazy man”. As a museum visitor, you can barely read the inscription if you stand close to the picture.

Brave and forward-thinking painters like Edvard Munch was by the end of the nineteenth century less interested in showing off their technical skills and more inclined to use their art to express inner thoughts, feelings and emotions, often considered too radical in their time. Even from early age, Munch used painting to represent anguish and despair like few artists had done before him. According to Munch himself, his art was not a form of catharsis but a scene where nothing else existed in life.

Munch was born in 1863, and grew up in Norway’s capital Christiania, now called Oslo. He was the son of a military doctor, and nephew of a Norwegian historian. Munch himself was frequently ill. He was encouraged to be culturally active, and he used his art to express his feelings about his experiences. He studied under Christian Krohg, Norway’s leading artist at the time, and his early influences were French Realist painters. Around 1889 he became involved with the Kristiania (as Christiania was spelled at this point) bohemians, a group of radical anarchists. Their leader, Hans Jæger, taught Munch about modernism, and encouraged him to paint about the longings and anxieties of the individual.

Interpretations of Norway’s Most Famous Painting
There is an inscription in the painting “The Scream”, stating: “Can only be painted by a crazy man”

Related: The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo

The inscription on the red sky in The Scream has been known for a long time, but now conservators have analyzed the handwriting based on Munch’s letters and diaries, and through infrared photography, the inscription on the work of art appears more clearly.

The idea and inspiration for The Scream was intensely autobiographical, with the painting’s content closely inspired by a personal experience first recorded in Munch’s now infamous 1892 diary entry:

“I was walking down the road with two friends when the sun set; suddenly, the sky turned as red as blood. I stopped and leaned against the fence, feeling unspeakably tired. Tongues of fire and blood stretched over the bluish black fjord. My friends went on walking, while I lagged behind, shivering with fear. Then I heard the enormous infinite scream of nature.”

For Munch, The Scream was profoundly personal. He has called it a “soul painting” in which he reveals an honest and perhaps even ugly glimpse into his inner troubles and feelings of anxiety. Originally Munch titled his painting The Scream of Nature. Well, who screams, is it the nature and the artist who is covering his ears for defense or is it an expression of the protagonist’s crisis?

Munch’s father is described as a religious man in most biographies of the artist. Perhaps it is his childhood experience of religion, and his subsequent exposure to modernist theories amongst the Kristiania bohemians, that caused conflict within him. However, Munch’s portrayal of raw human emotion through art has led to him being labelled an existentialist. Ideas of God and heaven which was once a certainty for him, were now outdated concepts, and all that was left was the suffering and anguish of a man without hope.

Interpretations of Norway’s Most Famous Painting
The Munch Museum Oslo. Photo: VisitOslo

Related: Edvard Munch Through the Eyes of Andy Warhol

But Munch loved to provoke. Today, conservators have no doubt that the inscription in The Scream was made by the artist himself. Both the handwriting and events from the time when Munch showed the painting for the first time in Norway point in the same direction. He saw his pictures as part of himself, and pressure from international media had been intense in the last 24 hours.

While Munch mentions feeling “unspeakably tired,” the painting also suggests his lightheadedness and helplessness in that moment, with the person in the foreground seemingly being pulled into the painting’s eerily sentient background.

Few people are aware that the Scream contains an inscription saying “Can only be painted by a crazy man”. Munch was probably no more neurotic than most of us. So, the inscription can be interpreted as a basic fear of being human and that we all stand alone as human beings. The figure in the painting holding his hands to his ears, is probably not the person who is screaming, but nature.

The new National Museum in Oslo will open next year, no exact date yet.

The brand-new Edvard Munch Museum will open summer this year.

Interpretations of Norway’s Most Famous Painting, written by Tor Kjolberg

Tips for Buying a Home in Sweden

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If you’re looking to buy a home in Sweden, you aren’t alone. Due to its stalwart commitment to social equality combined with a high GDP per capita, Sweden is consistently ranked among the happiest countries in the world. Thus, it’s no surprise that Sweden is attracting more and more immigrants as the years go by, because who wouldn’t want to live in one of the happiest places in the world? Here’s our tips for buying a home in Sweden.

While buying a home in Sweden might be the right move for you, you should understand a bit about what Swedish homeownership entails, how the process of purchasing a home works, and how to seamlessly integrate yourself into Swedish culture. Not only will this help you to avoid any surprises in the home buying process, but it will help you to more easily turn your new house into a real home.

Tips for Buying a Home in Sweden
In more rural areas of Sweden you’ll find larger plots of land for sale. Photo: Visit Sweden

Know What You’re Looking For
Sweden has a lot to offer homebuyers of every stripe. Whether you want to live in a bustling city like Stockholm to enjoy music, restaurants, bars, and art or out in the countryside to take in the stunning beauty of the Swedish landscape, you won’t be disappointed. While in any of the major cities you’ll likely only be able to find a modestly sized apartment, in more rural areas of Sweden you’ll find larger plots of land for sale, often with the iconic Swedish red cottages dotting the countryside.

If you’re a citizen of the United States and are looking to move to Sweden, it is important to understand that the act of finding the perfect home is largely on your shoulders. Sweden doesn’t have buyer’s brokers, and without a real estate agent, you will be interacting directly with and entering bids to the seller’s broker. While this might seem daunting, seller’s brokers are required to ensure that whatever deal is struck is equally beneficial to both parties.

Tips for Buying a Home in Sweden
One thing that you can do to emulate Swedish culture is to take a look at how they design their homes. Photo: Visit Sweden

The process of finding the perfect home in Sweden is otherwise largely similar to house-hunting anywhere else in the world. Doing your due diligence on a property is especially important without a real estate agent helping you make the final decision. To find the best possible home for your needs, think about what is most important to you in a house and don’t jump headfirst into a huge financial commitment without first being sure a home suits your particular needs.

Buying a Home Will Be Different
In addition to having the bonus of finding and submitting bids on the perfect home in Sweden being on your shoulders, there are other ways in which buying and owning a home in Sweden might be different than expected. Prospective buyers must hire independent building surveyors to root out any faults in the property as the seller is responsible for faults in the home for up to 10 years if they are detected before the purchase.

Sweden has no restrictions on foreigners buying property, though, for any citizens of the United States, they must understand how financing and the actual costs of homeownership add up in Sweden. While Americans can certainly finance a real estate purchase overseas using a self-directed IRA or implement other methods of financing, there is a more direct route. Assuming one can provide the rather extensive proof of income, foreign buyers are eligible to obtain a mortgage in Sweden and many other European countries.

Tips for Buying a Home in Sweden
A typical Swedish modern villa. Photo: Maka arkitektur, Swedish residential houses and holiday homes.

Adapt to the Unique Design World
If you’re foreign and are looking into purchasing a beautiful home in Sweden, it will also likely mean needing to adapt to the culture to fully integrate yourself. One thing that you can do to emulate Swedish culture is to take a look at how they design their homes. While home design and decoration are unique everywhere, open house exhibitions in Sweden highlight the pinnacle of the country’s predilections for style.

Though it can be daunting to try to change up your style of decorating to try and keep a homogenous aesthetic with your new neighbors, Swedish style decorating is pretty straightforward. Due to the dark winters, homes generally have light and airy colors to accentuate and reflect the natural light coming in. Mirrors placed throughout Swedish homes also help to make rooms feel brighter, and while accessories are largely shunned, greater importance is placed on well-designed furniture as the centerpiece of each room.

Swedish homes are also a far cry from the often gigantic homes that can be found in the U.S. as they eschew massive rooms for more compact, cozy living spaces. These smaller spaces are another reason why Swedish design can lean towards minimalism as there really isn’t that much room for all the random knick-knacks and superfluous, unused furniture that abound in American homes. Learning how to design for the smaller spaces you’re more likely to find in Sweden is an important step towards making a lasting home in the Nordic country.

At the end of the day, where you choose to purchase your home is ultimately a huge decision and should not be taken lightly. That being said, buying a home in Sweden might be drastically different than purchasing a home overseas, but in many ways, the differences put much more power in the hands of the buyer. Just remember to do your due diligence and to respect and embrace the unique culture Sweden has to offer and your new house will quickly become a home.

Tips for Buying a Home in Sweden
Beau Peters

Tips for Buying a Home in Sweden, written exclusively for Daily Scandinavian by Beau Peters. Beau is a creative professional with a lifetime of experience in service and care. As a manager, he has learned a slew of tricks of the trade that he enjoys sharing with others who have the same passion and dedication that he brings to his work. When he is not writing, he enjoys reading and trying new things.

Feature image (on top): © Peregrine Photography on Unsplash

Outstanding Spa in North Sweden With Breathtaking Surroundings

Orbaden has been known as one of the most beautiful bathing resorts in Sweden for more than 100 years. As early as the 1920s, it was widely known that at the Ljusnan valley there was a bathing beach that was something out of the ordinary. According to the first tourist brochure, even the most famous beaches on the Swedish west coast could not «stand comparison». Read more about the outstanding spa in North Sweden with breathtaking surroundings.

At Orbaden Conference and Spa you will enjoy beneficial relaxation and also discover interesting culture and fantastic nature. And the story goes far back in time. It all began in June 1926 when a man from the valley named Borgfeldt opened a bathing restaurant “located only seven hours’ journey from Stockholm”. In the beginning, there were cheap rooms for rent on nearby farms and in private homes.

 

Related: Outstanding Swedish Spa Experience

Orbaden Conference & Spa is located in Hälsingland, in the north part of Sweden, between high mountains and deep valleys near the Lake Ljusnan, which also has a lovely beach. This bucolic environment will make anyone’s heartbeat slow down and calm, even the most stressed of us.

The owner Helene Åkerström says that the mission of Orbaden Conference & Spa is to offer visitors a typical Scandinavian spa with bright colors, first class Scandinavian food prepared in its exclusive restaurant and the best food from Kerstin Florian. In 2019, an eco-field was created that supplies the restaurant with day-fresh vegetables. The field has also become an integration project that gives life and inspiration to both city and country.

Outstanding Spa in North Sweden With Outstanding Surroundings
From one of the hotel suites

Related: Spa Well-Being – The Swedish Way

The spa offers several spa-treatments for customers’ well-being and is equipped with a small thermal salt pool with water at a pleasant temperature of 35-36 degrees. The use of the pool is included in the daily rate of every room and apartment. The hotel also offers an amazing outdoor Jacuzzi overlooking the breathtaking lake.

Outstanding Spa in North Sweden With Breathtaking Surroundings
One of the nine themed suites

In 2016, there was a major investment in several pools, a spa shop, a new lobby with a conference hall and 9 themed suites. Customers staying at Orbaden Conference & Spa are assured that they never get bored. In the vicinity of the hotel, there are so many outdoor and indoor activities to do all year round that many guests feel they should have allowed more time for their stay at the hotel.

Related: Sweden’s New Floating Sauna Hotel

Outstanding Spa in North Sweden With Breathtaking Surroundings
The hotel also offers an amazing outdoor Jacuzzi

Visitors will be able to enjoy a concentrated bit of Sweden, with a focus on nature and typical Swedish culture, such as big farmhouses, handcrafts and, of course, the nearby famous Jarv Zoo hosting Nordic animals.

Outstanding Spa in North Sweden With Breathtaking Surroundings, written by Tor Kjolberg

All photos (c) Orbaden Conference and Spa

Building A Luxury Jewelry Collection In Stockholm

Current global events aren’t keeping the wheel of fashion from turning in Stockholm, with Crown Princess Victoria recently launching the city’s digital fashion week from Haga Palace. Victoria sported two of the hottest trends in jewelry this year: an oversized chain necklace and oversized earrings, which provided the touch of bling that offset an elegant and simple black ensemble. Over the years, events such as Fashion Week have established Stockholm as a key European player when it comes to fashion and jewelry. Read more about building a luxury jewelry collection In Stockholm.

If you plan to visit the city to purchase a few items for your own curated jewelry collection, the following tips may be of help.

Building A Luxury Jewelry Collection In Stockholm
When in Stockholm, it pays to visit local shops for luxury items that can be made-to-measure

Going Classic
If you are building a personal jewelry collection, then investing in a small number of items by iconic jewelry houses such as Cartier, Bvlgari or Chopard is ideal, as these pieces tend to cling to their value, and as time passes, many designs come to be considered valuable vintage pieces. In Stockholm, you can find these boutiques in the city center. Cartier is located on Smålandsgatan 10; Bvlgari can be found on Hamngatan 18-20; and many items by Chopard and other prestigious brands can be found at shops like Nymans Ur 1851 on Biblioteksgatan 1. Stockholm houses all the famed jewelry houses you might find in European fashion capitals like Paris, London and Milan, so whether you are after a Love bracelet or a dreamy Chopard nature-inspired diamond watch, you will be spoiled for choice.

Also written by Karoline Gore: Interesting Scandinavian Names For Your Baby

Bespoke Jewelry
When in Stockholm, it pays to visit local shops for luxury items that can be made-to-measure. Doing so will ensure that some of the pieces you purchase are one-of-a-kind and somehow connected to your visit to Sweden. Shops like A.P. Shaps and Caroline Hjerpe stock both ready-to-wear items and customized pieces. Having an item made for you is a good way to marry your dream jewelry piece with a reasonable spending budget. For instance, if you are after a halo ring, pendant necklace, or dazzling diamond tennis bracelet, you may not wish to fork out the price demanded by a VVS1, VVS2 or VS1 diamond. Sometimes, diamonds that are slightly included – i.e. those that have category 1 or 2 flaws – can still dazzle with their brightness, particularly if they are part of a pavé or delicate design. You can also mix a variety of diamond clarity grades in your design, allowing main stones to shine in flawless perfection.

Building A Luxury Jewelry Collection In Stockholm
Princess Victoria wearing Charlotte Bonde earrings. Photo: Charlotte Bonde

Choosing Statement Pieces
One of the hottest trends as viewed on catwalks this year comprises large, oversized statement pieces, as favored by Princess Victoria. You will find a plethora of modern, future-forward jewelry shops in Stockholm in areas like Östermalm and Södermalm. Gaudy, for instance, is inspired by avant-garde art, while Deisy’s is known for its unique, ultra blingy designs. Fun, colorful jewelry that dresses up simple fashions is always a hit at parties, so make sure your collection has a few pieces that will spark up conversations at your next soirée.

Also written by Karoline Gore: Top Fishing Sots in Stockholm

Building A Luxury Jewelry Collection In Stockholm
Body-Mind-Soul necklase by Jonna Jinton. Photo: Jonna Jinton

The Stockholm fashion scene is moving full speed ahead, with digital shows replacing physical ones for the moment. If you have chosen a few must-have items online, wear them with the right jewelry, shopping for classic as well as funky, colorful pieces. Stockholm has numerous shops selling retail and exclusive jewelry alike, so whether you’re looking for investment pieces or you’re after a trendy ‘of the season’ piece, you will certainly find a variety of options and designs.

Building A Luxury Jewelry Collection In Stockholm
Karoline Gore

Building A Luxury Jewelry Collection In Stockholm, written exclusively for Daily Scandinavian by Kraroline Gore. Karoline is a freelance writer from Stoke on Trent in the UK who left the corporate grind when she started a family and has never looked back. She enjoys contributing to a range of online publications on the topics that are important to her.

Feature image (on top) by Thorn Yang / Unsplash

Summer of Joy in Denmark

Desperate to reopen parts of the economy frozen by the pandemic, Denmark’s government is now joining forces with businesses to create a summer of joy in Denmark. By developing a digital passport that shows whether the holder has been vaccinated against COVID-19, the Danes want to facilitate and revive travel. Let’s hope for a summer of joy in Denmark – and other places in the world.

Denmark, a kingdom with less than six million inhabitants, has proved to be the leading vaccination distributor in Europe, and the aim is to have vaccinated the whole population by June. The COVID-19 passport will provide personalized documentation of a negative COVID-19 test result to be presented while traveling across country borders.

Related content: Microsoft looks to Denmark

Summer of Joy in Denmark
The COVID-19 passport will provide personalized documentation of a negative COVID-19 test result. Photo: Norway.no

COVID-19 passport on your mobile phone
In a news conference last month by the Danish government in cooperation with representatives of the country’s two main business organizations: the Confederation of Danish Industries, which represents Denmark’s major companies, and the Danish Chamber of Commerce, Danish Finance Minister Morten Boedskov, said that “in three, four months, a digital corona passport will be ready for use, for example in business travel. It will be the extra passport that you will be able to have on your mobile phone that documents that you have been vaccinated,” Boedskov said. “We can be among the first in the world to have it and can show it to the rest of the world.”

Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod added that this move is vital to keep Denmark ahead of the game taken into account the sufferings of crucial Danish business operations.

Summer of Joy in Denmark
“in three, four months, a digital corona passport will be ready for use, for example in business travel,” said Danish Finance Minister Morten Boedskov

Related content: Scandinavia Expected to Have an Economic Kick-Start in 2021

Digital systems reduce bureaucracy
As soon as a laboratory has analyzed and released the test result, the COVID-19 passport can be viewed, downloaded and printed – just as long as the test is no more than 7 days old and the result was negative.

Denmark, like neighboring Nordic and Baltic countries, has in recent years moved toward digitizing systems to reduce bureaucracy, using online platforms that support electronic authentication and digital signatures to enable paperless communications across both the private and public sectors.

However, since personal medical data is so sensitive, it’s a difficult task to make a COVID-19 passport. That is why many European nations covered by stringent EU privacy laws appear desperate for someone else to go first. Certain rules apply in some countries, and changes in such rules can come into effect on short notice.

Related content: Danish “Word of the Year” 2020

Summer of Joy in Denmark
Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod said that the corona passport is vital to keep Denmark ahead of the game taken into account the sufferings of crucial Danish business operations.

Denmark is not alone
Denmark is not alone. Some similar digital passports, for example one called CommonPass, is being developed to help travelers to securely show that they’ve complied with COVID-19 testing requirements. The International Air Transport Association has been working on one since late 2020. Others with options ready to go include the nonprofit Commons Project Foundation, computing giant IBM and secure ID company Clear.

The Danish COVID-19 passport has been created by the Danish Ministry of Health, the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the Danish Police.

The Danish government said it would decide later whether the digital passport should be used for purposes other than travel to help reopen public life.

Summer of Joy in Denmark, written by Tor Kjolberg

Feature image (on top): Hannah Busing / Unsplash

Swedish Singer/Songwriter Cultivates Songs for Grieving

Despite the fact that her name can be translated into happiness in English, the Swedish singer/songwriter Lykke Li has been successful just because she cultivates songs for grieving. 

Lykke Li (born Timotej Zachrisson 1986) has been used in advertising campaigns by brand names such as Levi’s and Victoria’s Secret, she has collaborated with artists like Røyksopp, Kayne West and Kings of Leon, but she is not impressed with today’s youth culture. She loves old music and believes that songs should have a healing effect.

Swedish Singer/Songwriter Cultivates Songs for Grieving
Lykke Li performing at BST Hyde Park 2019.

Swedish world citizen
Li Lykke was born in Ystad, Skåne by a photographer mother and a punk-reggae musician father.  Her younger brother, Zacharias Zachrisson (a.k.a. Vacation Forever), is also a musician. The family moved to Stockholm when Zachrisson was a toddler and when she was six moved to a mountaintop in Portugal where they lived for five years. The family also spent time in Lisbon and Morocco, and winters in Nepal and India.

Related article: Talented Swedish Singer/Songwriter Releases New Pop Single

Lykke Li discovered the joy of music when she was seven years old, in a spartan house in Estorninhos, a Portuguese idyll with 200 inhabitants. The family had acquired their first TV, and the first thing see watched was Michael Jackson’s video “Black and White”. Later she experienced how grief was cultivated in the fado – sad songs about broken hearts, performed in Lisbon’s restaurants.

Swedish Singer/Songwriter Cultivates Songs for Grieving
Hard Rain video. Screenshot by Moley Talhaoul

Her music has been featured in several movies
She moved to Brooklyn, New York City, for three months when she was 19. She returned when she was 21 to record her first album, Youth Novels. A remixed version of her song “I’m Good, I’m Gone” was featured in the 2009 horror film Sorority Row. The song “Possibility” was written for the 2009 film The Twilight Saga: New Moon. Li had been asked to write a song to the film soundtrack but was reluctant to commit to the project. It was after she had seen an early screening of the film that she decided she wanted to contribute to the soundtrack, which was released in October 2009.

Related article: Millions of Plays for New Hit by Swedish Pop Star

Her debut album was followed by Wounded Rhymes (2011), I Never Learn (2014), and So Sad So Sexy (2018). Last year she teamed up with Oscar-winning producer Ludwig Göransson for her first-ever single in her native Swedish “Bron” (translated as “The Bridge” in English).

Swedish Singer/Songwriter Cultivates Songs for Grieving
“I need grief in music,” says Lykke Li. Her album “Wounded Rhymes”, has a bold, provocative sound. Photo: The Windish Agency

Pop artist noir
The Swedish noir pop artist has managed to marry her two favorite things, music and feminism. She often supports festivals celebrating women. “Then I can sing and give back at the same time,” she says.

Her positive feminist message is: “All businesses all over the world are pretty much ruled by rich white men… that’s what we’re trying to change.”

Related article: The Swedish YouTube Star

“I need grief in music,” she says. “My records are sad, and it’s sadness I like best in all kinds of music. In all this darkness there is something very positive, something to grasp, and that helps me through the day. ” Cheerful Beach Boys, for example, are not one of her favorite groups. She prefers Leonard Cohen, Billie Holiday and Nina Simone.

In “Bron” she sings (translated from Swedish):

You go after me
But I won’t stay
Let me go.

(co-written and produced by Ludwig Göransson)

The song “Get Some” was featured in the 15th episode of the first season of Hawaii Five-0 titled “Kai e’e”. The song was also used in ABC Family’s drama “Pretty Little Liars” in the 18th episode of the second season which was titled “A Kiss Before Lying”.

Several broken love relationships
After her third album, I Never Learn, Lykke Li’s female-focused directive has become clearer. She appears as a strong woman who has widened her definition to encompass vulnerability while not sacrificing any tenacity. “I think for the first time I felt like I had arrived into being a woman.”

Lykke Li has gone through several broken love relationships, but despite song titles like «Breaking It Up” and “Unrequited Love”, she does not write classic “break-up” albums.

 

As close as possible to her possible truth
One of her latest releases, “Still Sad Still Sexy” is a remix EP with songs taken from her 2018 album with the same name, including alternative versions of “Deep End” and the title song and two new songs “Neon” and “Baby Doves”.

Making music, ang getting it as close to her possible truth as possible, seems to be the only way Lykke Li knows how to create

Swedish Singer/Songwriter Cultivates Songs for Grieving, written by Tor Kjolberg

Feature image (on top): Lykke Li at Primavera Sound, Barcelona 2018 © Matias Altbach/NME

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian

Falling for someone doesn’t come with alerts or permissions. You wake up one day, and their existence seems to fall in place with yours. Regardless of the differences between you two, you don’t choose to have a choice. And there you go; all of a sudden, it just is what it is. Here are 8 reasons you should date a Scandinavian.

Well, you’re in sheer luck if you found your significant other in a Scandinavian. Coming from a diverse and unique background, the Scandinavian has much to offer and makes your life 10x interesting apart from the dating domain. They are an all-in-one package.

To provide you with a glimpse of what it would be like and why you should date a Scandinavian, here are the top eight reasons:

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
Scandinavians get recognized for their warm and sweet nature. Photo: Timo Stern/Unsplash

They Are Warm And Sweet
Scandinavians get recognized for their warm and sweet nature. One may not get the hang of their vibe in their first go, but with time these passionate people reveal their hidden and more wondrous side.

What’s more, Scandinavians strongly believe in taking out time for those who matter even in their busy schedule at all costs. They will skip their work if it’s due and make sure that they are there for you if need be.

With them, you need not worry about receiving a cold; Sorry, I’m a bit caught up right now. Catch up later!

Instead, you can confidently expect: Be right there!

And for this very reason, we believe dating a Scandinavian is quite satisfyingly wholesome. Not that everyone gets to experience this, but those who do, report so!

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
You will get to enjoy a fair share of responsibilities and command in your day-to-day life. Photo: Sandy Millar/Unsplash

You Get To Enjoy Equal Authority
Considering that the share of responsibilities and authority is one of the primary debates between men and women in the current times, you may find this aspect of your Scandinavian partner to be the best. You will get to enjoy a fair share of responsibilities and command in your day-to-day life. Be it house chores or the bills, your Scandinavian partner will treat you as an equal and will expect you to participate equally.

The gender equality factor runs deep in their roots. Thus, if he is your man, expect less of gentleman(ly) habits such as getting you a chair, pulling the door, and whatnot. And if your girl’s Scandinavian, you need not be offended by her love for independence even in the smallest of things.

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
Besseggen mountain walk. Photo: John Fiddler/Visitnorway.com

You Get To Explore Exotic Places
Dating a Scandinavian would mean getting access to the hidden, resident-reserved exciting spots at the iconic Scandinavian places. Sure, you can visit as a tourist too. But again, your significant other will know about all the amazing stuff that they don’t put up on the front for the public. Hence, endless joys!

And. Should you plan for marriage, prepare yourself for an enthralling and exotic honeymoon. Perhaps, a romantic Sweden or sandals honeymoon.

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
Their aesthetic yet practical fashion sense comes from the grounds. Here, a man in Helly Hansen workwear.

They Make Styling Easy And Effortless
By now, you would know at least one thing for sure: Scandinavians are both composed and intense. Coming from socially complex and intriguing lands like Denmark, Norway, or Sweden, these people learn to live well in a variety of challenging situations. And thus, have a firm command over things, naturally.

Related article: The Ultimate Jaw-Dropping Scandinavian Wedding Destinations

Their aesthetic yet practical fashion sense comes from the grounds. You will find the Scandi style of clothing revolving around neutral and solid colors. They blend minimalistic looks with sleek accessories. And when the temperature drops down below 40 degrees Celsius, you will find your Scandinavian significant-other layering up in the most aesthetically pleasing way.

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
Scandinavian interior.

And Setting Up Your Place Much More Fun
Along with their fashion sense, you can count on your Scandinavian partner to take care of the interiors too. Their command of neutral colors and minimalism grants them the ability to set up a fully-functional yet stunning room or lounge, whichever it may. Now, you shouldn’t expect your partner to somehow magically operate like a professional interior designer. Go with their taste in color and furniture, and work for it mutually to yield the best results.

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
You can expect loads of cross-country road trips! Photo: Kai Pilger/Unsplash

You Would Get Exposure To More Than One Culture At Once
Perhaps, the most exciting thrill that a Scandinavian individual promise is their abundant cultural knowledge and highly integrated cultural self. Hence, you can expect to learn and even participate in a variety of different local festivities, such as All Saints, St. Martin’s Day, Midsummer celebration, and whatnot.

Plus, the borders between the Scandinavian countries are almost non-existent. You can expect loads of cross-country road trips!

Related article: Love and Relationships in Scandinavia

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
A Scandinavian will teach you how to play with a different combination of sandwiches, cheese, jam, spreads, etc.

They Will Teach How to Go Elite with Breakfast
Scandinavian do not seem to understand how a mere bowl of cereal can provide enough fuel for the day. And if you’re dating them, they will make sure that you quit on such unhealthy habits. Instead, they will teach you how to go grand about it. They will teach you how to play with a different combination of sandwiches, cheese, jam, spreads, etc. Sometimes, on special occasions, they may go a step ahead and include smoked fish and meat of sorts.

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
With a Scandinavian, you will find your clouds of stress, hesitation, and confusion clearing out. Photo: Thought Catalog/Unsplash

They Will Teach You How to Get Easy
Have you heard about Scandinavians’ habit of taking off their shoes at the entrance? Whether they’re in a get-together, attending a party, or whichever.

Although this may seem a petty habit, it reflects a very deep-rooted and influential attribute, i.e., their ability to be down to earth. With them, you will find your clouds of stress, hesitation, and confusion clearing out. They will keep it all much comfier for you.

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian
Shawn Mack

8 Reasons Why You Should Date a Scandinavian, written exclusively for Daily Scandinavian by Shawn Mack. Shawn is a content writer who offers ghostwriting, copy-writing, and blogging services. His educational background in business and technical field has given him a broad base from which to approach many topics.

Feature image (on top) © Everton Vila/Unsplash

Scandinavian Potatoes

Potatoes are the soul of Scandinavian cooking. They are eaten with almost every meal, and accompany anything traditional. You would think that, given such culinary success, they have been here for ages, but in fact potatoes have been eaten in Scandinavia for only 200 years. Learn more about Scandinavian potatoes.

Even if they were known before, they were regarded with great suspicion: potatoes ar a member of the nightshade family, and it was hard for the authorities to convince the public that they were edible. When people finally were convinced, everybody grew and ate them; as well as being a crop that protected people against famine, potatoes were relatively easy to grow on the extremely stony ground of much of Scandinavia.

Most importantly perhaps, people soon realized that potatoes fitted beautifully with all the core elements of Nordic cooking – fish, butter, cream, herbs, apples and onions. Everything tasted much nicer with potatoes than with the porridge, hard bread, pea mash and parsnips that were eaten before the potato became the staple.

Scandinavian Potatoes
Fried potatoes. Photo: Coop.no

Nowhere is the potato cherished as much as it is in the north, where the year’s new potatoes are awaited with great excitement. The first new potatoes of the year are auctioned at sky-high prices and the event is even published in the papers. Local people hunt the potatoes down from numerous road stalls with rickety signs or from the shops – suppliers frequently run out by noon, despite the often ridiculous prices.

Appearance and taste
Many Scandinavians grow potatoes in their gardens just to enjoy the exquisite taste of very young, new potatoes. Freshly dug new potatoes are a national passion. Mothers teach their children the only truthful indication that potatoes have been newly dug, when you rub your fingers against the flaky skin it must come off in one stroke, revealing a moist, mother-of-pearl sheen to the flesh.

We have many Nordic cultivars; some are in constant use, while others are kept in the Nordic gene bank, from where anyone can order a few spuds and help to keep the regional potato heritage alive. There are two Nordic gene banks, NordGen in southern Sweden and one secure storage bank on the Atlantic islands of Svalbard.

Scandinavian Potatoes.
Boiled potatoes. Pgoto: Coop.no

There are specific cultivars for new potatoes, and potatoes for winter use. New potatoes have a much higher water content and are best boiled. Starchy winter potatoes have numerous uses, as mash, baked, fried or oven-cooked edges, making use of their starchiness. Special waxy salad potatoes are also available. In reality you must love what you can get as the number of cultivars available in the shops is very few. If you want to eat old, tasty cultivars, or potatoes for a specific use, you must grow your own or go to a farmers’ market.

Buying and storing
New potatoes are supposed to be bought fresh every day, while old potatoes can be stored as long as they are kept out of the light. Instead, use a a crock with a lid kept in a cool, frost-free place. In spring, all potatoes tend to sprout, sending out long, pale shoots if kept in the dark. As long as the sprouts are small and the potato is not too wrinkled it is fine to eat. A partial sprinkling of black spots on the skin are harmless scabs which you can remove with a good scrub.

Damaged green (or partly green) potatoes should not be eaten. The green could indicate that the level of toxic solanine is high, even if this is not always the case. It’s not good enough to cut off the green patches.

Potatoes provide plenty of starch, relatively high levels of vitamins and also good protein.

Scandinavian Potatoes
Growing garden potatoes. Photo: Mills AS

Culinary uses
It’s important to remember the difference qualities of seasonal potatoes and the traditions of how to serve potatoes all year round reflect this.

In Scandinavia, when new potatoes are in season, they are the most important part of the every day meal. Roles are reversed for a short time, meat and fish becoming the accompaniments to the potatoes, temporarily the stars of the dinner show. A salty-sweet matjes herring, chives and dill, and a blob of crème fraiche, or a few rashers of bacon, butter and dill, are all you need for dinner until the new potatoes become old news, by which the magic is gone, and potatoes assume their traditional accompanying role.

Scandinavian Potatoes
Baked potato. Photo: Rema 1000

Even though pasta and rice are becoming the everyday starch in many Scandinavian families, potatoes remain a vital part of traditional cooking. Many open sandwiches are unthinkable without potatoes. Maybe the most popular smørrebrød is a piece of buttered rye bread, boiled, sliced new or even old potatoes, chives, homemade lemony mayonnaise and perhaps a rasher of bacon. And then of course there’s the eternal classic – rye bread with potatoes, various herrings, dill and onion.

Want to try something different?

Scandinavian Potatoes
Burning love. Photo: Copenhagennet.dk

Burning love

How this dish ever got its name, I have no idea. It’s far too filling to get you in the mood, but it’s very satisfying in other ways. It’s a cheap and comforting dish in its own right.

1 quantity caramelized onions
for the baked apples
4 eating apples
4 tablespoons sugar
20 rashes of bacon
for the mashed potatoes
1.5kg floury potatoes
54g salted butter
200ml full-fat milk
Salt and pepper

Serves 4 – 6

Quarter the apples and remove the core, then arrange in a baking dish. Sprinkle the sugar on top and turn the apples to coat. Arrange the bacon rashers on top. Bake in the oven at 200ºC/gas mark 6 until the apples are tender and the bacon is crispy.

Rinse and peel the potatoes if they are large, cut into slices. Boil in unsalted water until completely tender, then drain, keeping some of the water. Mash the potatoes with the butter, milk and black pepper, using a balloon whisk. If the mash is too dense, add some of the cooking water. Salt at the last moment, to avoid glueyness.

Heap up the mashed potato on a pretty dish to form a Norwegian mountain, then arrange the apples, bacon and onions around the base, and let a knob of butter melt down the peak.

Scandinavian Potatoes, written by Tor Kjolberg

Feature image (on top): Monika Stawowy/Unsplash

Sweden’s ‘One-Minute City’ Design

All Scandinavian countries, Denmark, Norway and Sweden, are competing to launch their ‘greenest city’. Sweden is now launching its ‘One-Minute City’ design to improve urban living. Read more about Sweden’s ‘One-Minute City’ design.

The ‘One-Minute City’ concept is that no locals should need more than a minute to access everything they need, from playing grounds to social hubs. The new national experiment, which started last fall in central Stockholm, asked residents to work with designers using Lego-like parts to redesign their space with a new vision of what one agency started to call the “one-minute city”.

Sweden’s ‘One-Minute City’ Design
The ‘One-Minute City’ concept is that no locals should need more than a minute to access everything they need, from playing grounds to social hubs

A building kit to transform the way we use city streets
In front of a gourmet sausage shop in Gothenburg, where it was a couple of parking spaces before, there are now a picnic table and racks for cycles an e-powered scooters. Rumors say that the sausage shop’s turnover has quadrupled.

Related: Gothenburg, Sweden Worked Hard For Greenest City Title

It is the Swedish think tank ArkDes which has developed a building kit to transform the way we use city streets, as part of its Street Moves project, which takes the French “15-minute city” concept to an even more granular level. “The 15-minute city” is a concept now being implemented in Paris. The Swedish concept aims to demonstrate how streets might transform within neighborhoods where walking and cycling are prioritized over driving and could be healthy, sustainable and vibrant by 2030.

The minimized need for traveling long distances to reach work, home or leisure attractions during Covid-19 has increased the idea of thinking local to incite sustainable change.

Sweden’s ‘One-Minute City’ Design
The Swedish concept aims to demonstrate how streets might transform within neighborhoods where walking and cycling are prioritized.

40,000 km of streets
ArkDes is a national agency that focuses on sustainable urban design, which partnered on the project with Vinnova, the Swedish national innovation agency. “Sweden has about 40,000km [25,000 miles] of street already built, which, if you think of that as a space, is kind of extraordinary,” says Dan Hill, the director of strategic design at Vinnova, who is the force behind the project along with the architecture curator Kieran Long.

Related: Sweden Contributes to Making Europe Greener

And now, ArkDes’s new concept is taking it even further by empowering citizens to add public facilities right outside their doorstep, paving the way for “one-minute cities”. Last summer, the team started piloting the project on four different blocks around central Stockholm. Each had an elementary school, and children became part of participatory design workshops to reimagine the street, adding swings, dance platforms, and street painting.

Sweden’s ‘One-Minute City’ Design
It is the Swedish think tank ArkDes which has developed a building kit to transform the way we use city streets

Positive surveys
About 70% of the 322 people surveyed about the Stockholm projects were positive, with ArkDes claiming a 400% increase in movement on the streets around each unit. Currently being tested and evaluated in Stockholm, Gothenburg and Helsingborg, the building kit comprises an expandable modular wooden platform, with different parts that can be placed on top of one another. The changes are a part of Sweden’s plan to get to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2045; nine Swedish cities are aiming to get to net zero emissions by 2030.

The unit in Gothenburg will shortly be followed by one in Helsingborg, and other cities in Sweden have also expressed interest. One partner is the national transportation regulatory agency, which is helping deal with parking space regulation. Though it starts at the level of transforming single blocks, it’s flexible enough to be spread throughout the entire country.

Related: World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden

Sweden’s ‘One-Minute City’ Design
About 70% of the 322 people surveyed about the Stockholm projects were positive.

Helsingborg next
The Helsingborg unit will be outside a sixth-form college, and combines seating with planters and integrated LED lighting. Designed by Lundberg Design, the building kit means city residents can quickly build shared facilities such as playgrounds, outdoor gyms, urban gardens, storage, social hubs, open-air meeting spaces, electric charging stations for cars and parking for electric scooters.

 

Sweden’s ‘One-Minute City’ Design, written by Tor Kjolberg

All images ©  Lundberg Design