The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park | © Francisco Tirado

In the heart of Copenhagen’s bustling city center, where green spaces have become increasingly rare, Danish architecture studio Cobe has transformed a prime location into a lush, green oasis known as The Opera Park. This public harbor-front park, located between The Royal Danish Opera and Cobe’s soon-to-be-completed Paper Island, offers respite from the urban hustle and bustle. 

The Opera Park Technical Information

The Opera Park is a place where nature comes first amidst Copenhagen’s bustling urban development. With its six gardens, winding paths and carefully crafted viewpoints, the project seizes elements of Copenhagen’s historical, romantic gardens to tackle today’s challenges such as decline in biodiversity and water management. 

– Dan Stubbergaard, Founder of Cobe

The Opera Park Photographs

The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado
The Opera Park credit Francisco Tirado
© Francisco Tirado

Nature Takes Center Stage

The journey of The Opera Park began in 2019 when the A.P. Møller Foundation commissioned Cobe to design a new park on a former industrial island in Copenhagen’s inner harbor. This location, adjacent to The Royal Danish Opera, had been a modest green lawn for nearly two decades. Today, it stands as a diverse and natural landscape, challenging the dense urban development that surrounds it.

The Opera Park is not just a park; it’s a collection of six gardens, each representing different parts of the world. These gardens include the North American Forest, the Danish Oak Forest, the Nordic Forest, the Oriental Garden, the English Garden, and the Subtropical Garden housed within a stunning greenhouse and atrium at its center. These gardens hold delightful surprises, such as fountains, water lily ponds, and reflecting pools, creating a soothing ambiance for visitors.

Dan Stubbergaard, Founder of Cobe and a Professor at Harvard, emphasizes that The Opera Park prioritizes nature in the midst of Copenhagen’s urban development. Designed to address contemporary challenges such as biodiversity decline and water management, the park offers a much-needed green oasis. As you explore the park, you’ll feel like you’ve left the city and entered a natural wonderland, forgetting the urban hustle.

The Opera Park sets the stage for experiencing nature in the heart of Copenhagen. Like an opera stage, the park is a composed landscape with a foreground, a middle ground and a background. The 80,000 plants and 600+ trees are placed to naturally create a scenic setting facing the harbor. The terrain and trees are tallest where they create the background, and lowest in the foreground towards the harbor

– Dan Stubbergaard, Founder of Cobe

The Opera Park is designed to be inviting year-round. It features an impressive array of 628 trees, 80,000 herbaceous perennials and bushes, and 40,000 bulb plants from around the world. This diversity ensures a vibrant and ever-changing backdrop for visitors throughout the seasons. The park becomes a canvas painted with different colors and scents, from spring’s bloom to winter’s tranquility.

At the park’s core lies a remarkable greenhouse with a café, providing access to underground parking. This organically shaped glass structure, with its hovering roof, surprises and delights visitors as they navigate the lush landscape. The greenhouse ensures that The Opera Park remains vibrant year-round, even during Copenhagen’s chilly winters.

The park also features a covered connection to the adjacent Royal Danish Opera via a landscaped bridge, creating a weather-protected link between the parking facility and the Opera. The curved glass and floating roof of this walkway harmonize with the park’s landscape design, integrating nature and architecture seamlessly.

The Opera Park prioritizes sustainability. Rainwater is collected and used for greenhouse irrigation, and permeable gravel pathways and rain beds are designed for efficient water management. Solar panels on the Opera’s roof provide power to the underground parking facility, the park, and the greenhouse. Robust and recyclable materials, along with strategically planted trees, protect against strong winds and potential flooding.

The Opera Park Plans

The Opera Park plan greenhouse credit Cobe
Floor Plan | © Cobe
The Opera Park section greenhouse credit Cobe
Section | © Cobe

The Opera Park Image Gallery

About Cobe

Cobe is an architecture company founded in 2006 by architect and Professor at Harvard University, Dan Stubbergaard. Cobe’s ambition is to create surroundings that actively contribute to extraordinary everyday living. Among the firm’s principal projects are The Silo in Copenhagen’s Nordhavn (North Harbour) district, the urban space Karen Blixens Plads at the University of Copenhagen, and HALFTIME, the global headquarters for Adidas, in Germany.

Notes & Additional Credits
  1. Engineers: Vita, Via Trafik, DBI and Lüchninger Meyer Hermansen
  2. Contractors: Hansson og Knudsen, Bauer, Redtz Glas og Façade, HSM Industri, GK Danmark, Bravida
    Danmark, Høyrup & Clemmesen, KONE, Phønix Tag, Jakon, Areo, Terrazzo.dk, Raadvad Maleren,
    Snedkerierne, OKNygaard, Palmproject Europe, Scanview Systems, Zurface, Retail Reflexions, Vector
    Foiltech
  3. Client: The Opera Park Foundation
  4. Donation: The A.P. Moller Foundation
  5. Program: Public park including greenhouse with café and underground car park for up to 300 cars
  6. Parking spaces: 300
  7. Charging stations: 48 AC chargers and 1×2 DC chargers
  8. Bicycle parking spaces: 100