Parks and open spaces in Oslo
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Parks and open spaces are an integral part of the landscape of Oslo, the capital and largest city of Norway. The various parks and open spaces are interconnected by paths so the city's inhabitants can walk between them.
As the city expanded in the middle of the nineteenth century, areas were appropriated for parks and recreational purposes. The eastern part of the city (Østkanten) was prioritized due to congestion and industrialization. The residential and more affluent western parts of the city (Majorstuen, Frogner) have comparably fewer parks and open spaces. 95% of the city's inhabitants have a park or an open green space within 300 meters of their home.
Some of the many parks have a special place in the life and history of Oslo:
- Frogner Park with the Vigeland Sculpture Park, Norway's most visited tourist attraction.
- Eidsvolls plass and Studenterlunden along the main street Karl Johans gate.
- Slottsparken, which surrounds the Royal Palace.
- St. Hanshaugen, the first large public park outside the city center.
- Birkelunden and Olaf Ryes plass in Grünerløkka.
- Akerselva environment park, with walks around structures from early stages of Norwegian industrial development.
- Bygdøy and Ekebergsletta, large natural parks.
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[edit] Landscape and parks
The central part of Oslo is situated between hills; Holmenkollen / Voksenkollen / Vettakollen and Grefsenåsen north of the city and Haukåsen to the east, all of them with a height of 350–500 meters. In the southeast there is the Ekeberg hill, about 150 meters. On the slopes from the hills north of the city Holmenkollåsen, Grefsenkollen and Korsvollparken are the areas that provide the best view.
The slopes at Ekeberg has the best view over the central city area. The part of the Ekeberg hill that faces the fjord has woods with paths and views towards the fjord. The viewpoints around the city has several parks; Blåsen in Stensparken, St. Hanshaugen, the hills Ola Narr - Tøyenparken - Kampen park are all three with an elevation around 80–90 meters above sea level. Hasleparken behind Tøyenparken is somehow higher. On the Aker ridge (from Akersneset with the castle along the Akersgata to St. Hanshaugen) is also Kontraskjæret and Egebergløkka used as parks, with views over Pipervika and the eastern part of the inner city. Torshovparken and Myraløkka on Sagene have views towards the center of the city and the fjord.
Akerselva with its surroundings has in the last hundred years been landscaped so both the river and its industrial history is preserved. The task of developing the other rivers within the city as parks have started. The work with the river Alna has been concluded with an environment park while Lysakerelva, Frognerelva, Hovinbekken and Ljanselva is still under development.
Oslo has a long shoreline that has been used by shipyards and ports for the last 150 years. In the west, on the border to Bærum the Vækerøparken is situated along the shoreside. Beaches with parks are Huk on Bygdøy, Katten and Hvervenbukta and areas on Malmøya and Ulvøya. The "Fjordby" plan allocates more access to the shoreline for the city's population.
Among the islands within the city border Hovedøya, Gressholmen and Langøyene are easily accessible by ferries, and have extensive parks and beaches. In Gamlebyen, the water level in Middelalderparken gives a view of the shoreline in medieval ages.
[edit] Early parks in Oslo
North of the Olav's monastery (currently the bishop's residence) there was a garden in late medieval age, where vegetables were grown and with a fish pond. Apart from that there is little knowledge about gardens in medieval Oslo. It is however most possible that the monastery at Hovedøya had a garden, created by the English monks living there. The garden at the castle Akershus is the earliest depicted garden in Norway, possibly created around 1560. The garden had neatly arranged beds, a pavilion and a fish pond called Munkedammen after the feudal overlord Christen Munk. The garden was cleared by the end of the 1600s, the pond filled in around 1860s but reopened in 1965. On the fortress came the Kanonparken in the 1770s created by the commandant. It was publicly constructed and open, although not primarily for the civil population.
Paléhaven was the first publicly available park when the owner Christian Ancher opened it in 1760s. It was Norway's only city park in baroque style and was situated by the shoreline. What is left of it today is an alley of linden trees on Christian Frederiks plass ("Plata"). Many enclosures around the early city had gardens, mostly for growing vegetables, from the eighteenth century also as parks. Ponds were created for fish. The only one of these enclosures unsullied is the closure Rolighed at Professor Dahls gate 32.
The garden on Marseli's enclosure (Marselienborg) is the current Eidsvolls plass, where German and Dutch gardeners around 1600 created what was the finest garden in the city. Around 1840 there was established a public park on Eidsvolls plass and the area south of it was developed. The nearby garden on Ruseløkken, the current Studenterlunden, was a renaissance garden at that time.
The garden around Munkedammen in Pipervika was around 1750 one of the first semi-public gardens where the upper class of Christiania went for walks, but it decayed after 1790. The pond was about 50 meters wide and 100 meters long and was a continuation of two earlier, separate ponds one assumed that the monks from the Hovedøya monastery had created. In the pond there was a small island with a pavilion and a herb garden.
North of Stortorget and Grensen several parks were created around 1700, among them James Collet's Grensehaven between Akersgata and Grubbegata, in renaissance style. The garden at Oslo Ladegård had hedges, paths in a square system, a long pond and alleys down to the fjord, in renaissance style. A small part of Ladegårdshagen was recreated in 1999.
Grünerhagen, created by the Grüner family on Nedre Foss was around 1700 a grandiose garden with terraces, alleys, a pond with a garden pavilion on piles and a zoo with various animals. The garden was destroyed by the end of the nineteenth century.
Bygdøy was the summer residence for the viceregent and had a renaissance garden from around 1680. The peninsula became an excursion spot by the end of the eighteenth century. Around 1830 a new garden in landscape style was created at Kongsgården and walks in the nearby woods were cleared.
Several of the estates around the city had grand linden alleys in the eighteenth century: Stubljan, Linderud, Søndre Bjølsen (currently Bjølsenparken) and Nordre Skøyen hovedgård. Linderud gård had a large garden with a 70-meter-long canal and a 120 alley of hazel trees. In the city center there are still linden alleys in Paléhagen, Regjeringsparken and Dronningparken.
The park surrounding Bogstad mansion from 1780 was the first in Norway in landscape style. Peder Anker engaged a gardener from Germany who utilized the slope from the main house down to the Bogstadvannet lake, with curved paths and artificial creeks. A similar style was applied when John Collett created the park around Ullevål gård, known for its rich variety of sentiments and as a center for the city's social life. Vækerø also had quite a large garden in a similar style and it is preserved today as Vækerøparken.
The wealthy Bernt Anker created a baroque park at Frogner hovedgård at the end of the eighteenth century. When Benjamin Wegner bought the estate in the early nineteenth century, a romantic landscape style park was created. That park included parts of what today is the Frogner Park. Around 1800 there was a total of 96 persons in the city that offered gardening services.
[edit] 1812 - 1865: The first public parks
When tiny Christiania with around 10,000 inhabitants became capital of Norway in 1814, the foundations for creating parks were not favourable compared with other larges cities in Europe:
- There were no castles with gardens, that could become a public park, as the Tuileries Palace.
- There were no continuous ramparts that could be demolished to make way for a park, as in Copenhagen (Tivoli Gardens, botanical garden, Ørsted park and Østre anlegg.
- There were no large areas in the center of the city that could be converted to parks, as the Royal Parks of London.
Before 1870 there was no common opinion on the need for the city to engage in constructing parks. When the city's park administration was founded in 1875 and the rapid expansion of the city started, there were all the same several nice parks. Various private persons and organisations had provided for this:
- Citizens in the organisation Selskabet for Christiania Byes Vel had constructed several parks.
- State authorities engaged in creating a capital; the area at Tøyen to be used by the new university, the Botsfengselet jail with its surrounding park, areas in vicinity to the Akershus castle, the garden Universitetshagen behind the university.
- Landlords that did not want neighbours created Eidsvolls plass
- A Frenchman with grand ideas (Charles XIV John of Sweden and Norway) created Slottsparken and laid the foundation for the park areas on Bygdøy.
- A businessman with varied interests, Fritz Heinrich Frølich, created the St. Hanshaugen park.
The Børshagen park was initiated by Christiania Byes Vel in 1812, the organisation cultivated an area previously known as grønningen. This was the first publicly constructed park in Christiania and it was opened in 1819. It was named Esplanaden and was an important place for walks, even after the Christiania Stock Exchange opened in 1826.
The organisation Selskapet for Christiania Byes Vel concentrated on creation of public parks as one of its main priorities during its first fifty years of existence. At the bridge Nybrua crossing Akerselva the organisation erected the city's first outdoor monument in 1833, with a surrounding park. Bankplassen was laid out with the city's first bed of flowers in a public park (around 1860), trees were planted around Oslo Cathedral and Trefoldighetskirken and the organisation managed to stop construction at Kontraskjæret. Selskapet for Christiania Byes Vel did also organize planting of trees along various streets, among them Grønlandsleiret, the road from Nybrua to Tøyen, Drammensveien and Rådhusgata. Some of the trees are still standing across Kontraskjæret.
The Slottsparken, surrounding the Royal Palace, was laid out from 1838 to 1844, in landscape style with large trees, paths, ponds and lawns in the curved terrain. Within Slottsparken the Dronningparken face Drammensveien and is a romantic, intimate park, constructed some years after the main park and in general closed for the public, except for a limited time during the summer. To the east, facing Karl Johans Street are the heights Abelhaugen and Nisseberget. The 225-decare large park has a number of well-known statues and sculptures.
King Charles' original plan for the park was for it to continue to the Uranienborg woods, where the Uranienborg church is today, and be part of a chain of parks from the Royal Castle to the Bygdøy peninsula. The king's monumental plans were not realized in full, but the Slottsparken is Oslo's major central city park and the landscape of the Bygdøy peninsula with its woods, beaches and paths has made a major imprint on the city. King Charles took possession of the mansion at Bygdøy and proclaimed the area as a public park in 1837. He bought enclosures along Frognerkilen and constructed Lindehagen, today's Dronningberget, north on Bygdøy. The wood that belongs to the Royal Mansion was designated as a protected area in 1940. King Oscar II constructed pathways west and north on the peninsula, as of 1882 there were about 10 kilometers of paths available for the public.
Studenterlund in the center of Christiania was bought by the state in 1837, the area was by then a park called Ruseløkken park. After the university opened across the street in 1852, the park was much used by students and was thus named after them. A restaurant, Frizners pavilion opened there in 1864. The park has been renewed several times over the years, the most significant when Nationaltheatret was erected in the center of the park in 1899.
Eidsvoll's plass, with the area today called "Spikersuppa" was purchased from the landlord's across Karl Johan's street in 1846. The large trees in the park are probably from around 1850. The area was then still swampy and the Bislett creek that traverses the park was still open, and not dug over before 1860. The state bought the area area in 1858. It took some years before the park was finished. The statue of Henrik Wergeland was unveiled in 1881.
The park at the university was laid out around 1850, as an enclosed area between the university buildings at Karl Johan's street.
The area at St. Hanshaugen was a scrap heap and viewed as a useless area until the celebration of summer solstice (St. Hans in Norwegian) was moved there some time before 1820. The businessman Fritz Heinrich Frølich initiated a park there around 1850, got his will after much initial resistance and paid for the first works. In the middle of the 1860s Christiania Byes Vel was involved with the new park, planted 1275 trees and helped create the first major park outside the city center. From 1867 the city took responsibility for the park and the last major works were carried out in the years 1876–1890. The final part of the park was added with purchases of land in 1909. St. Hanshaugen had its heyday as an attraction from 1890 to the First World War. It is a classic city park where terrain, vegetation and water is used. The mixture of intimate and romantic areas in the south with more plain areas in the northern part, fabulous views, entertainment, a good restaurant (Hasselbakken), animals (birds and bears in a cage) all added to making the park popular.
The area around Tøyen was designated for the city's first university, from when the state bought the mansion Tøyen hovedgård and until around 1820, when it was decided that the university should be in the center of the city. In the years 1814–18 the botanical garden was laid out, and from around 1830 several enclosures were given to professors at the new university, the one remaining is Bellevue in Tøyenparken. The state ownership of the area helped preserve large areas for the future park.
Around the prison Botsfengselet (opened 1851) there was established a park, today known as Grønlands park and Klosterenga.
The city was not particularly late in creating public parks; Bremen established the city's first park in 1804, Stockholm had its first public park Strömparterren in 1832 while New York got its Central Park by the end of the 1850s.
[edit] 1865 - 1916: Refuge from the city
Around 1870 the view regarding parks changed; it was now seen as a natural task for the city's authorities. The view was that parks had two major good effects:
- It would soften the harmful influence from the city, noise, soot, smoke and dirt from the expanding industry and straitened circumstances.
- It would give the city residents an aesthetic impact that was educative and curative.
Christiania grew faster than most European cities around 1870–1890. Property developers built houses and villas while the city provided roads, water and sanitation. Due to fire regulations the building material was brick, and this is largely the area that today is inside Ring 2 (the bypass road 2). Several new parks were created, most of them in the eastern part of the city. The argument giving priority to the eastern part was that it was the most crowded part of the city and was thus most in need of parks.
The city's expansion and a web of trams contributed to increased commuting. Combined with steadily reduced working hours this created a need to fill the available leisure time with activities. Some of the parks, like Kampen park, were used extensively from the time they were ready. The city's park organisation from 1875, Christiania beplantningsvesen, was a new power for creating and maintaining parks.
In the city center Paléhaven (currently named Christian Frederiks plass) was ready as a public park in 1897. Børshagen was upgraded when Kristiania Stock Exchange expanded in 1911. The city took responsibility for Studenterlunden and Eidsvolls plass in 1888 and 1889. Grev Wedels plass by the quarter called Kvadraturen was laid out as a 14-decare park in 1869, initiated by Christiania Byes Vel. The park was created on an area previously used by the armed forces.
From 1869 to 1880 several smaller parks was created in the central part of the city:
- By the Oslo Cathedral, 3 decare, in 1870
- By Trefoldighetskirken
- By Old Aker Church
- By Grønland kirke
- Halfdan Kjerulfs plass
- Bankplassen
- Nordraaks plass
- Solli plass
The park around Sagene kirke was ready in 1893. A minor park in what is currently known as Ruinparken was ready in 1872, the first park that indicated the medieval part of the city.
Around 1865 the architect Georg Andreas Bull sketched a general plan for Grünerløkka. One owner and one architect for the whole area turned out as a good solution concerning parks. Three spacious parks were planned in the otherwise densely populated area. Whole blocks assigned to parks were inspired by the renovation of Paris. Birkelunden and Olaf Ryes plass, laid out in 1882 and 1890, became two very popular parks, favourably viewed also today. Schous plass at the southern perimeter of the area was ready in 1916. In combination with the construction of parks along the river Akerselva from 1915 this gave the inhabitants of Grünerløkka good access to green areas.
Kampen park was opened in 1888, on a height with a water reservoir. The view, the exciting terrain, the cavern with water where children could play were reasons why this classic park became very popular. Nearby Vålerenga park was created in the years 1903–1916, had the Vålerenga church in its center and a good view of Lodalen.
Bjølsenparken was laid out in 1900 on a part of the garden belonging to Søndre Bjølsen mansion, known for its linden alley along the ridge of the park. A large area west of the park has been assigned allotment gardening from 1912. Grønland park, surrounding the main prison Botsfengselet, sometimes called Botsparken, was opened in 1913.
Stensparken was the only major new park on the western part of the city in this period, and was constructed on a hill that had been used to dump garbage. The height Korpehaugen (Blåsen) is a untouched part of nature within the park. The park was constructed in landscape style from 1890 and was finished during the Second World War. The Fagerborg church is in the southern part of the park.
Uranienborgparken was opened in 1904 on the height where Uranienborg church was constructed in 1886. The park is sited north-east of the church and parts of it were used for building a playground in 1922 and a kindergarten in 1954. South of the height Riddervolds plass was laid out as a park in 1885.
Excluding the two parks mentioned above, no major parks were laid out on the western part of the city, the reason for this being that there was no single major developer in the area. From Majorstuen towards the city center there is therefore a striking lack of green spaces, same goes for the Frogner area.
To the west of this densely inhabited part of the city the first stage of the Frogner Park was opened in 1904, the previous baroque garden between Frogner Manor and the street Kirkeveien. For the Jubilee exhibition in 1914 paths were laid out west of the manor and bridges were built over the ponds.
Among streets with trees the Bygdø allé, laid out around 1890 soon got a reputation for its chestnuts. The trees grew, and towering close to the buildings by the street, the common view was that the solution used for Gyldenløves street, where there is an alley in the center of the street, was a better one. In connection with the Jubilee exhibition in 1914 the street Kirkeveien alongside the Frogner Park was widened and got trees in the centre strip.
Some of the mansions in the area laid out private parks in the period, which later became public parks, as Skøyenparken (Søndre Skøyen mansion, Ullern borough), a large park in landscape style constructed around 1860.
Part of the slope on the western side of Ekeberg was bought by the city in 1889 to secure the area for the public and prevent developers from destroying the well known landscape.
Park concerts organised by the city started in 1907, widely popular for many years, and still in existence as of 2007. There were also started park libraries in three parks in 1901, in two of them the libraries were closed the same year whereas at St. Hanshaugen there was a park library until 1907.
[edit] 1916 - 1940: An active public park policy
The years 1916–17 were important for the parks and the green city. The city park organisation (Parkvesenet) was established as an independent body, with Marius Røhne as the city gardener. He had established the country's first garden architect firm and became a decisive leader for the organisation. The city established a parks committee, with its first leader, the well-known politician Fernanda Nissen from the Norwegian Labour Party, as its leader. The committee managed to get development of parks into the public debate.
The city's options for enforcing its policy were strengthened by the new role the city obtained from 1911 in developing housing projects. In many projects there were large areas covered by the plans, under the well known city planning officer Harald Hals.
The class struggle and industrial actions during and after the First World War also reached Norway, and just after the war the eight-hour day was introduced. A huge part of the population in Oslo was workers, and they now got markedly more spare time. The workers parties laid pressure on the city so it would support this extra free time with added options for activities.
Until the start of the Second World War a number of initiatives were taken, as part of a coordinated city policy for parks and green spaces. The city park policy was part of a new city welfare policy that made Oslo known abroad.
The first years green areas in residential areas got priority, ahead of the parks in the city center. The city park organisation maintained that by constructing robust and neat parks and removing fences the public would engage in keeping them tidy, which worked. By the end of the period the budgets were pressed and the many new parks stretched the resources. The parks had to be made simpler and flowerbeds removed.
[edit] Pathways, street trees, playgrounds and green housing areas
[edit] List of parks
Below is a list of major parks and open spaces in Oslo. The tables are split between the various areas of Oslo. The tables gives the name of the park, size, the year established and a link to a map.
[edit] Central Oslo
[edit] Sentrum
Parks and open spaces in Central Oslo include [1][2]
Park | Size | Year | Map link | |
---|---|---|---|---|
decares | acres | |||
Slottsparken (The Palace Park) | 225 | 56 | 1850 | |
Kontraskjæret | 18 | 4.4 | 1970 | |
Eidsvolls plass | 16 | 4.0 | Around 1861 | |
Grev Wedels plass | 14 | 3.5 | 1869 / 1984 | |
Studenterlunden | 11 | 2.7 | Before 1845 | |
Universitetshagen (The University Garden) | 9 | 2.2 | 1850s / 1932 | |
Vaterlandsparken | 9 | 2.2 | 1994 | |
Rådhushagen (The City Hall Garden) | 4 | 1.0 | 1947 | |
Christian Frederiks plass (Paléhaven) | 3 | 0.7 | 1750s / 1897 | |
Halfdan Kjerulfs plass | 0.5 | 0.1 | 1861 | |
Regjeringsparken | — | — | Around 1990 |
Børshagen, the city's first publicly created park (4 decare, 1819, map), is no longer open for the public.
[edit] Inner city
The table shows parks in the inner city of Oslo [3], excluding the city center. Parks without proper info regarding size are arranged after estimated size. The minor parks are described under the table.
Park | Size, decare | Year | Area | District | Map link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frognerparken (a section of the park belongs to the outer city) | 467 | 1904 / 1936 | Frogner | Frogner og Ullern | Map |
Botanisk hage | 140 | 1818 | Tøyen | Grünerløkka | Map |
Torshovdalen | 136 | 1939 / 1948 | Torshov, Rosenhoff | Sagene | Map |
Tøyenparken | 93 | 1950s | Tøyen | Grünerløkka | Map |
St. Hanshaugen | 89 | 1865 | St. Hanshaugen | St. Hanshaugen | Map |
Sofienbergparken | 74 | 1961 | Sofienberg, Grünerløkka | Grünerløkka | Map |
Stensparken with Blåsen | 49 | 1890 / 1943 | Fagerborg | St. Hanshaugen | Map |
Marienlystparken | 45 | * | Marienlyst | St. Hanshaugen | Map |
Torshovparken | 41 | 1931 | Torshov | Sagene | Map |
Myraløkka | around 40 | around 1960 | Sagene | Sagene | Map |
Kampen park | 39 | 1888 | Kampen | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Bjølsenparken | 33 | before 1900 | Bjølsen | Sagene | Map |
Vålerenga park | 32 | 1903 | Vålerenga | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Middelalderparken | 30 | 2000 | Gamlebyen | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Klosterenga | 30 | * | Galgeberg | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Iladalen park | 26 | 1948 | Ila | Sagene | Map |
Uranienborgparken | 17 | 1904 | Uranienborg | Frogner | Map |
Birkelunden | 17 | 1882 / 1916 | Grünerløkka | Grünerløkka | Map |
Grønlands park and Botsparken | 15 | 1917 / 1924 | Grønland | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Hasleparken | 14 | * | Hasle | Grünerløkka | Map |
Ruinparken (previously called Minneparken) | 14 | 1872 / 1932 | Gamlebyen | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Hallénparken | 13 | * | Dælenenga / Torshov | Grünerløkka | Map |
Grünerhagen | 12 | 1700-t. / 1950 | Grünerløkka | Grünerløkka | Kart |
Idioten | 12 | 1930 | Valleløkken, Adamstuen | St. Hanshaugen | Map |
Olaf Ryes plass | 10 | 1888 / 1928 | Grünerløkka | Grünerløkka | Map |
Rudolf Nilsens plass | 9 | 1927 / 1999 | Tøyen | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Framneshaven (Tinker'n) | 8 | 1993 | Skillebekk | Frogner | Map |
Gråbeinsletta (with the park around Sagene kirke 11 decare) | 7 | 1922 | Sagene | Sagene | Map |
Skarpsnoparken | 7 | 1934 | Skarpsno | Frogner | Map |
Alexander Kiellands plass | 7 | 1927 / 2001 | Ila | Grünerløkka | Map |
Kristparken | 7 | 1964 | Hammersborg | St. Hanshaugen | Map |
Schous plass | 6 | 1916 | Grünerløkka | Grünerløkka | Map |
Langgaardsløkken | 6 | 1930 | Briskeby | Frogner | Map |
Hydroparken | 5 | 1960 | Frogner | Frogner | Map |
Amaldus Nielsens plass (Vestkanttorget) | 5 | 1930 | Frogner | Frogner | Map |
Sommerfrydhagen | 4 | 1995 | Tøyen | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Svartdalsparken | * | 1930s | Svartdalen | Gamle Oslo | Map |
Evald Ryghs plass | 4 | 1931 | Ila | St. Hanshaugen | Map |
Bülow Hanssens plass | 4 | 1939 | Carl Berner | Grünerløkka | Map |
Frøyas have | * | 1994 | Skarpsno | Frogner | Map |
Akersveien / Akersbakken in front of Gamle Aker kirke | 2 | 1869 | Gamle Aker | St. Hanshaugen | Map |
Ankerhagen | 2 | 1921 / 1985 | Ruseløkka | Frogner | Map |
Hygeaparken | 1 | * | Homansbyen | Frogner | Map |
- = reliable information lacking.
I addition is the river Akerselva with several smaller parks, among them Theodor Kittelsens plass (1917, kart) between Ankerbrua and Nybrua, Kuba (kart) on Grünerløkka, Våghalsen (kart), Heftyeløkka on Bjølsen.
In the inner city there are a few smaller parks, among them Arno Bergs plass (0,1 acres, 1932, kart), Dronning Astrids park (after 1995, kart), sentralparken and Gjenbruksparken in Pilestredet park (around 2000), Riddervolds plass (0,8 mål, established 1885, kart), Skillebekkparken (1869, kart), Sommerroparken (1870s, kart), Valkyrie plass (0.2 acres, 1929, kart).
Ladegårdshagen is a small garden designed symmetrically with ornate hedges in renaissance and baroque style. Freiaparken is a private, enclosed garden near the chocolate factory, in strictly regular forms, noted for the wealth of its flora and many sculptures.
Of the 25 parks in the inner city that are 2.5 acres or more, 19 are in the eastern section and 6 in the western sector (in the Frogner and St. Hanshaugen sections).
[edit] Outer City
The major parks and green areas in the outer city are:
Park | Decare | Year | Area | District |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ekeberg with Brannfjell, green fields and woods | 1695 | Ekeberg | Nordstrand | |
Alnaparken (Alnabru) | 200 | 2006 | Alna | |
Nordre Skøyen Hovedgård | 135 | * | * | Østensjø |
Korsvollparken | 87 | 1930 | Korsvoll | Nordre Aker |
Østensjøområdet | 86 | 1930 | * | Østensjø |
Svartdalsparken (nature park) | 83 | * | * | Gamle Oslo, Østensjø, Nordstrand |
Holmendammen | 64 | * | * | Vestre Aker |
Smestadparken | 49 | * | Smestad | Ullern |
Other parks in the outer city termed in the city's plan Grøntplan for Oslo, arranged after district (area, year constructed and size in brackets where known):
- Bydel Alna: Furusetparken (Furuset)
- Bydel Bjerke: Sverre Refstads plass (Risløkka), Veitvetparken (Veitvet), Økernparken (Økern, refurbished 2007), Årvollparken (Årvoll)
- Bydel Frogner: Bygdøy
- Bydel Grorud: Grorudparken (Grorud), Romsåsparken (Romsås)
- Bydel Nordre Aker: Harald Hals' park (Ullevål hageby, 11 decare), Kjelsåsparken (Kjelsås)
- Bydel Nordstrand: Lambertseterparken (Lambertseter), Nordseterparken
- Bydel Stovner: Stovnerparken (Stovner)
- Bydel Søndre Nordstrand: Hallagerjordet, Holmliaparken (Holmlia), Lofsrudparken, Stensrudparken
- Bydel Ullern: Vækerøparken
- Bydel Vestre Aker: Gaustadparken (Gaustad), Hovseterparken (Hovseter) Makrellbekken / Hoffselva
- Bydel Østensjø: Trasopparken.
Some of the old manor houses have gardens and parks that are open for public use: Søndre skøyen manor (1860s, private part, also called Den engelske park), Linderud manor, Bogstad, Frogner.
[edit] References
- ^ The definition of Central Oslo and Inner Oslo from Plan- og bygningeetatens is used, and linked to maps in Kommunedelplan Torg og møteplasser. (2007)
- ^ Anlegg og områder for friluftsliv i Oslo. Handlingsprogram for 2005–2008. Oslo kommune, Friluftsetaten, 2005, side 130
- ^ Se note 1
[edit] Further reading
- Knut Are Tvedt (red., 2000) Oslo byleksikon – Kunnskapsforlaget, Oslo. ISBN 82-573-0815-3
- Oslo bys historie. Oslo, Cappelen 1991–1994, 5 volumes
- Marius Røhne, Oslo kommunale parker og grønnanlegg 1810–1948. Oslo, Myhres papirindustri, 1967
- Ida Fossum Tønnessen og Dagfinn Tveito (red.): Den grønne by. Oslo park- og idrettsvesen gjennom 75 år 1916–1991. Oslo, Grøndahl & Søn, Park- og idrettsvesenet og Det Norske Hageselskap, 1991
- Magne Bruun: Norske hager gjennom tusen år. Oslo, Andresen & Butenschøn, 2007
[edit] External links
- This article was initially translated from the Wikipedia article Parker i Oslo.