Copenhagen New Nordic Design Sprint — Harbor Saunas, Superkilen & HAY House

Copenhagen New Nordic Design Sprint — Harbor Saunas, Superkilen & HAY House

A crisp, tactile three-day sprint for design enthusiasts: dedicated showrooms, public art, architecture, hands-on museum practice and a harbour sauna ritual. Quietly confident pacing with local studio encounters and time to touch materials.

Highlights

  • HAY House flagship showroom
  • Superkilen public art and urban design
  • CopenHot harbour sauna experience
  • Designmuseum Danmark workshops
  • Danish Architecture Center (BLOX)
  • Day trip to Louisiana Museum of Modern Art
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Itinerary

Day 1

Showrooms and architecture in central Copenhagen, ending with a tactile harbour sauna to reset the senses.

HAY House — Flagship showroom browsing

Start tactile: explore HAY’s curated furniture and small objects at the flagship HAY House. Focus on materials, proportions and finishing details.

09:30 – 11:00 • 1h 30m
Østergade 61, 2, 1100 København, Denmark
4.4 (907 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Ask staff to show the latest textile samples — they often have off-catalogue swatches for tactile comparison.
  • Photograph details (joinery, lamination edges) for later reference; avoid flash and be discreet during busy hours.
  • Wheelchair accessible on the ground level; call ahead if you want a quiet time or a private walkthrough with a showroom guide.

Normann Copenhagen flagship — contemporary Danish product display

A short stroll to Normann’s flagship to compare editorial merchandising and product narratives in situ.

11:15 – 12:30 • 1h 15m
Niels Hemmingsens Gade 12, 1153 København K, Denmark
4.2 (60 reviews)
Local tips:
  • Note how product groupings tell a story—sketch the layout flow for shop-display inspiration.
  • If you’re researching furniture finishes, ask to see sample pieces not on the showroom floor.
  • Nearest tram stop and street access make it convenient for carrying small purchases; larger items require arranging delivery.

Lunch — Atelier September (light, design-conscious café)

A tactile lunch in a pared-back, design-forward interior. Use the meal to sketch and note material palettes you see around you.

12:45 – 14:00 • 1h 15m
Kronprinsessegade 62, 1306 København, Denmark
3.9 (707 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Choose a corner seat near the window for the best natural light — useful if you want to photograph tabletop details.
  • Menus change seasonally; ask about provenance of ceramics if you’re cataloguing local makers.
  • Small venue; arrive early or reserve to avoid waiting during lunch hours.

Danish Architecture Center (DAC) at BLOX — exhibitions and urban thinking

Engage with current architectural dialogues: exhibitions, models and the layered waterfront context around BLOX.

14:30 – 16:00 • 1h 30m
Bryghuspladsen 10, 1473 København, Denmark
4.3 (4,233 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Inspect exhibition labels for designers and fabricators — DAC often credits local workshops you can contact for studio visits.
  • Use the roof terrace and façade details for material-stacking studies (bring a sketchbook and a measuring app).
  • Accessible lifts throughout; check DAC’s site for timed installations or guided tours relevant to your field.

Break — The Coffee Collective, Torvehallerne

Tactile pause with single-origin pour-over; excellent spot for sketch notes and quick surface studies before the evening.

16:15 – 17:15 • 1h
Vendersgade 6D, 1363 Indre By, Denmark
4.5 (1,890 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Order a filter coffee and ask about the roast profile — barista notes can reveal approaches to craft sharing.
  • Torvehallerne is good for sourcing small design objects — browse nearby stalls for locally made ceramics.
  • Outdoor seating available when weather permits; level access makes it easy to arrive with a portfolio bag.

Harbour sauna ritual — CopenHot floating sauna & hot tubs

An evening harbour sauna to close the day: a design-conscious, material-led body experience — wood, heat, water and skyline views.

18:00 – 20:00 • 2h
Refshalevej 195, 1432 København, Denmark
4.7 (570 reviews)
Local tips:
  • Book the sauna slot in advance and request a quieter time if you want to discuss craft with the operator.
  • Bring a small towel to place on wooden benches if you’re photographing joinery details after cooling down.
  • Foot access can be slick — wear rubber-soled sandals; the operator can advise on limiting humidity’s effect on cameras.

Day 2

Nørrebro’s creative pulse: Superkilen’s public art, local design shops and a museum workshop afternoon, capped by a design-conscious dinner.

Superkilen — public art and global design artifacts

Walk the park’s themed zones; study material contrasts, seating typologies and street furniture as a compact urban design case study.

09:00 – 10:30 • 1h 30m
Nørrebrogade 210, 2200 København, Denmark
4.2 (4,019 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Bring a measuring tape or phone app to record bench heights and spacing; Superkilen is a compact field lab.
  • Observe how signage and color-coding guide movement — photograph plan views from elevated points for layout study.
  • Sunday mornings are quieter for contemplative sketching; note that some sculptural pieces are climbable so check access signs.

Stilleben — curated ceramics, glass and small objects

A neighbourhood shop with carefully chosen ceramics and lighting; ideal for sourcing small artisanal pieces and maker contacts.

10:45 – 12:15 • 1h 30m
Frederiksborggade 22, 1360 København, Denmark
4.2 (65 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Ask the staff for maker contact cards; many artisans will welcome studio visits if introduced by the shop.
  • Handle pieces gently — staff appreciate when designers discuss fabrication techniques rather than just buying.
  • If you’re collecting materials swatches, photograph labels and ask about maker processes for later sourcing.

Lunch — Manfreds (Jægersborggade) — neighbourhood bistro with craft sensibility

Eat where local creatives meet: interiors and plating reflect a restrained Danish sensibility.

12:30 – 14:00 • 1h 30m
Jægersborggade 40, 2200 København, Denmark
4.2 (761 reviews)
Local tips:
  • The dining room uses local ceramics and cutlery — ask the staff about the makers for studio leads.
  • Book ahead for prime daylight seating if you want to sketch interior details.
  • Use the walk on Jægersborggade afterwards to browse small design ateliers and vintage stores nearby.

Designmuseum Danmark — collection and hands-on workshop

A focused visit to the national design collection with a booked workshop (ceramics/textiles or object conservation — pre-book).

14:30 – 17:00 • 2h 30m
Bredgade 68, 1260 København, Denmark
4.3 (7,669 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Reserve the workshop slot at least a week in advance; tell them you’re a design professional to request advanced content.
  • Inspect label typography and object mounts — the museum is a lesson in exhibition craft and conservation choices.
  • Ask curators for recent acquisition lists; they often share local maker names and studios working in similar fields.

V1 Gallery — contemporary art and object conversations

Short gallery visit to see how contemporary art programs mingle with object-based exhibitions and local designers.

17:30 – 19:00 • 1h 30m
Slagtehusgade 44, D, 1715 København, Denmark
4.5 (62 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Galleries rotate quickly — ask about the current show’s press kit for curator notes and production credits.
  • Gallery openings are good for networking with local creatives; check timing if you want to meet artists.
  • The scale and framing choices are instructive for designers planning installations — take notes on hanging heights and sightlines.

Dinner — Høst — New Nordic interiors and plated craft

A dinner where interior design and menu choreography speak the same language — excellent for studying hospitality design.

19:30 – 21:30 • 2h
Nørre Farimagsgade 41, 1364 København, Denmark
4.7 (4,092 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Request a table near the central installation — it’s useful to observe lighting and material choices up close.
  • Discuss ceramics and tableware with staff; many pieces are from local makers and can be sourced for projects.
  • Reserve in advance; the dining room’s rhythm and service are part of the spatial design experience.

Day 3

A focused day: a linear visit to Louisiana Museum (masterclass in display and landscape), return to central architectural highlights and a quiet design dinner.

Transfer — train from Copenhagen Central Station to Humlebæk (to Louisiana)

Morning rail transfer to Louisiana: an opportunity to review reference images and prepare questions for the museum visit.

08:30 – 09:20 • 50m
Local tips:
  • Buy a return ticket in advance and sit on the right side of the train for the best seaside approach photos.
  • Bring a compact umbrella — the coastal museum walkways can be breezy and exposure changes quickly.
  • Use the transfer time to sequence your museum notes and shortlist works you want to study in detail.

Louisiana Museum of Modern Art — collection, setting and exhibition craft

A deep visit: focus on museum display, the dialogue between art and landscape, and the museum’s use of daylight.

09:30 – 12:30 • 3h
Gl Strandvej 13, 3050 Humlebæk, Denmark
4.6 (16,085 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Arrive early to see morning light in the sculpture garden — prime time for studying material aging outdoors.
  • Request details from the information desk about recent exhibition build techniques; curators are often willing to speak briefly.
  • Take notes on how circulation routes frame views of the sea — Louisiana is a masterclass in sightline choreography.

Lunch — Restaurant Louisiana (museum café)

A measured midday break inside Louisiana with views across Øresund — good for consolidating visual notes.

12:45 – 13:30 • 45m
Gl Strandvej 13, 3050 Humlebæk, Denmark
4 (1,121 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Choose a window seat for uninterrupted views while you sketch exhibition layouts.
  • The café uses local produce and often local ceramics — ask staff about suppliers and makers.
  • If time allows, visit the museum shop for design monographs and limited-edition prints.

Transfer — return train to Copenhagen Central Station

Relaxed journey back; useful time to sort references and plan an afternoon architecture crawl.

13:45 – 15:15 • 1h 30m
Local tips:
  • Keep your sketches and camera files organised so you can reference them during the afternoon visit to the city.
  • If you collected brochures, photograph them now — paper can be bulky to keep.
  • Expect variable Wi‑Fi on regional trains; download maps and notes before departure from the museum.

Black Diamond — The Royal Library: a study in contemporary civic insertion

Examine material transitions between old and new, façade details, and the interior atrium’s play of light.

15:30 – 17:00 • 1h 30m
Søren Kierkegaards Pl. 1, 1221 Indre By, Denmark
4.7 (1,476 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Photograph the façade reflections at dusk; the black granite reveals subtle variations best seen in low light.
  • Inside, study handrail details and public seating; the library’s fittings are instructive for civic projects.
  • Check opening hours for the reading room if you wish to see original layout constraints and furniture choices in use.

Farewell dinner — Restaurant Radio

End the sprint with a quietly considered dinner in a space where culinary staging and interior design align.

19:30 – 21:30 • 2h
Julius Thomsens Gade 12, 1632 København, Denmark
4.4 (508 reviews)

Local tips:
  • Reserve an early table to take in daylight interior details or request a booth to study lighting layers up close.
  • Ask the sommelier about local producers—Restaurant Radio focuses on regional suppliers often using handcrafted packaging.
  • Use dinner to consolidate contacts collected over the trip — share notes and plan follow-up studio visits.