St. Hanshaugen

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Bydel St. Hanshaugen
Image:Oslo_coat.png
Image:Oslo_sthanshaugen.png
City Oslo
Borough NO-030104
Area 3.59 km²
Population
 - Total (2004)
 - Density

26,423
7,360/km²
www.bsh.oslo.kommune.no
St.Hanshaugen park
St.Hanshaugen park

St. Hanshaugen is a borough of the city of Oslo, Norway. It has a triangular shape, with its northern border just north of the buildings of Norsk Rikskringkasting (Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation) and Ullevål University Hospital, and south of the Universitetet i Oslo campus at Blindern. In the east, the boundary runs just west of the river Akerselva, then down Storgata before it turns north, up Grensen, Pilestredet and Suhms gate. The borough has its name from the park by the same name that lies centrally within it, where the citizens used to celebrate summer solstice (St. Hans in Norwegian). The park was planted by the city in the years 1876-86; it has a pavilion, and a reflecting pool covering a reservoir.

To the southeast of the park is Oslo’s oldest building – Aker kirke, built around 1100, but restored from ruins around 1860, and then again in the 1950s in a more authentic style. Next to the church is the cemetery Vår Frelsers Gravlund, created in 1808 as a result of the great famine and cholera epidemic of the Napoleonic Wars. The nearby area around Damstredet and Telthusbakken is interesting since it retains the small town character of Oslo in the first part of the 19th century.

To the southwest of the park is Bislett stadion, founded in 1907. Finished in 1940, this was the main venue of the 1952 Winter Olympics in Oslo. The stadium was demolished in 2004, and a new stadion was built in its place.

The borough also contains the Norwegian veterinary academy – Veterinærhøyskolen, the cemeteries Nordre Gravlund and Vestre Aker, and Youngstorget – home of the Norwegian labour movement.

[edit] Demographics

January 1, 2004, there were 26,728 people living in the borough. Of these 13,093 (49%) were male. There were 1,918 immigrants from western countries and 2,488 from non-western countries. The countries with most immigrants were Sweden (789), Denmark (272), Pakistan (191), Somalia (188) and Vietnam (182). There were 537 births in 2003, and 260 deaths. The same year 8,139 people moved into the borough, while 8,101 moved out. The average income for the borough was NOK 262,534, somewhat higher than the average for the city of 254,429.[1]

In 2001, 59.4% of those over 20 years old in private households were living alone (national average 37.5%). Of the remainder, 15.7% were cohabitants and 24.9% married (national average 12.2% and 50.2% respectively). [2]

[edit] External links


Boroughs of Oslo Oslo coat of arms

Alna | Bjerke | Frogner | Gamle Oslo | Grorud | Grünerløkka | (Marka) | Nordstrand | Nordre Aker | Sagene | (Sentrum) | St. Hanshaugen | Stovner | Søndre Nordstrand | Ullern | Vestre Aker | Østensjø

Coordinates: 59°55′37.58″N, 10°44′27.82″E