Skiers and snowboarders now have a place to play in Copenhagen. You can polish of your freestyle skills on the ramp and the three rails. It's free for the public to give it try, and the ramp will be open until March 2011.
Sarah is from Canada and is spending a semester in Denmark. In this video she tells about her expectations and why she chose to come on exchange in a small Scandinavian country to study.
This December you can go treasure hunting in Copenhagen. Every day until Christmas a new piece of street art will be made somewhere in the city. Your job is to find it.
The bike is a vital mode of transportation for students in Denmark and in Africa. Emil Wilk has started a project that enables students thousands of kilometers apart to share a bike in order to get to school. And everything is funded by advertising.
Classic Danish food is not fast food. Sometimes it takes days to prepare a dinner and to make a dish taste just right. In the restaurant Classic 65 in à rhus they practice the old style cooking, where the food is local and organic and the cooking is slow.
With water on three sides, beautiful light and a thriving fishing culture, Skagen in Denmark attracted painters from all over Scandinavia. From here they started a revolution i Danish art.
Everyday the bells in the tower of Our Saviors Church in Copenhagen play a concert for the entire city. Lars, the organ player, has the entire city as his audience.
On tall buildings and hidden away in small corners, Ã rhus has world class street art. Follow Nicolai Juhler from the Center for Urban Art around the city, and he points out the best pieces.
Parkour is a sport, where you use your surroundings and create new ways of moving through the city. Everything from buildings, benches and stairs are used. Now theres is a place in Copenhagen to practice.
Bikes are a neccesary mean of transportation in Denmark, especially in jobs where you need to travel around town. But not all immigrants know how to ride the bike.
For world class restaurants, you need world class vegetables. At Kiselgården almost all the crops are biodynamic, and that makes all the difference for the taste - and for the farmer.
Every other Friday over the summer, almost 500 people on wheels take over the streets of Copenhagen. With police escorte and confused spectators they roll through the inner city.