A Walk Through The Barcode, Oslo, Norway
The Barcode Project is a section of the Bjørvika portion of the Fjord City redevelopment on former dock and industrial land in central Oslo. It consists of a row of new multi-purpose high-rise buildings, that was completed in 2016. The developer is marketing the project as The Opera Quarter. There has been intense public debate about the height and shape of the buildings.
The Barcode buildings are between Dronning Eufemias gate (Queen Eufemia's Street), which will be the main east–west thoroughfare in the Bjørvika neighborhood and is a stretch of what is currently Bispegata, and Trelastgata (Timber Street, a new street that during planning was also called Sporgata, Track Street), which will run alongside the rail lines to Oslo Central Station on the northern edge of the development. A line of apartment buildings will be between Dronning Eufemias gate and the Oslofjord, where the new Oslo Opera House has already been built.
Barcode Project - Oslo, Norway (HD)
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The Apartment at Dronning eufemias gate 20 (OSLO BARCODE)
The apartment at OSLO BARCODE Dronning eufemias gate 20 Barcode
The Barcode, Oslo, Norway June 2013
A short video showing the Barcode buildings in Oslo, Norway as they were on June 15th, 2013. Like them or not, they certainly are striking. I understand all the arguments against them, but I still am really looking forward to seeing the are entirely completed with the street and park and everything. Maybe in 2014. :-)
Adeyto @ THE BARCODE PROJECT most protested constructions in OSLO NORWAY by Huawei P20 PRO
The Barcode Project is a section of the Bjørvika portion of the Fjord City redevelopment on former dock and industrial land in central Oslo. It consists of a row of new multi-purpose high-rise buildings, that was completed in 2016. The developer is marketing the project as The Opera Quarter. There has been intense public debate about the height and shape of the buildings!!! There has been widespread criticism of the heights and designs of the Barcode buildings, both from architects and from citizens of Oslo. The Barcode has been described as a barrier between the fjord and the rest of the city that will destroy Oslo's character as an open, low-rise city with a lot of green space and cast a permanent shadow on adjacent neighborhoods for the benefit of a rich few. The architecture has been described as chaotic, as part of a trend of spectacular buildings, which within a few years will be seen as having disfigured the city. In addition to the disruption of the very large building site, the project has been described as hostile to the urban life of the city: unbalanced in favor of private business space and with too few shopping and eating opportunities for the public, and narrow, corridor-like passages between the buildings.
The project is among the most protested . . . ever in Oslo.
The Barcode has been planned as a row of different buildings with views between them. The unbuilt spaces between the buildings are to be at least 12 m wide. Several of the buildings will have fewer floors facing the fjord than the railway. The buildings are long and narrow (for example, DnB building B is 21 m wide and 105 long). The stated purpose of choosing such dissimilar building forms is to avoid a massive wall between the fjord and the buildings behind the Barcode, and that the Barcode principle, with segmented construction, will contribute to openness, light penetration, and transparency in the built-up area. The buildings will have a shared basement, entered from Trelastgata.
Oslo Barcode Project - Nowa dzielnica Oslo
05.2015
Spacer po dzielnicy drapaczy chmur w Oslo - Barcode Project.
Barcode Project Animation Oslo-Norway
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (
Barcode Project Oslo-Norway Final
A fly through animation on the city of Oslo to analyze the Barcode project. The animation and modelling were created using Autodesk Infraworks software.
Barcode complex – a concept of the Oslo wharf renovation
Recent years saw a thorough reconstruction of some wharf and industrial areas in the capital of Norway. Now the area of Bjørvika harbour has gained a new function owing to a complex of office buildings called Barcode, which is a new landmark of the city. Three of the complex buildings were glazed with glazed units of our production.
The Barcode complex consists of 12 glazed, multi-storey buildings of different heights – they are narrow and when seen from the right perspective, they look like a barcode. In three buildings of the Barcode complex: MAD bygget, DNB vest-bygget and DNB øst-bygget (The Carve) glass manufactured by our plants was used.
The majority of the space is intended for offices but there are also apartments, restaurants and shops.
More:
Oslo, Norway | 4K Timelapse | Part II
Oslo, Norway. The second series of time-lapses captured in and around Oslo city.
Locations:
Barcode, Opera House, National Theatre, Frogner Park, Havnelageret, Majorstuen, The Royal Palace, Paradisbukta, Fornebu, and Sørenga.
Music by:
Myster Hope - Home
Equipment:
Panasonic lumix g9, Olympus pen-f and Syrp Genie mini.
Lenses:
Panasonic Leica 12-60mm f2.8-4, Panasonic Leica 100-400mm f4-6.3, Olympus 7-14mm pro f2.8 and Olympus 300mm pro f4.
My sites:
#visitoslo #visitnorway #oslo #norway #photography
FLYING TO OSLO, NORWAY! | Oslo Opera House, Barcode Project, Akrobaten Bridge
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Song Used:
Jazz For The Soul - Lower Level
Instrumentals produced by:
Best of You, Barcode, Oslo
Unn deg litt luksus i en travel hverdag. Best of You er en fullservice velværeklinikk i Barcode for både kvinner og menn. Book time på eller ring oss på 21 45 42 50. Velkommen!
MAD building in Barcode, Oslo