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Tempe Church

1960 establishments in Norway20th-century Church of Norway church buildingsAC with 0 elementsBrick churches in NorwayChurches completed in 1960
Churches in TrondheimChurches in TrøndelagLong churches in Norway
Tempe kirke, Trondheim
Tempe kirke, Trondheim

Tempe Church (Norwegian: Tempe kirke) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Trondheim municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the Lerkendal area in the city of Trondheim, between the old European route E6 highway and Lerkendal Stadion. It is one of the churches for the Nidelven parish which is part of the Strinda prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nidaros. The white plastered brick church was built in a long church style in 1960 using plans drawn up by the architect Roar Tønseth. The church seats about 240 people.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tempe Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tempe Church
Valgrindvegen, Trondheim

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Latitude Longitude
N 63.411045858 ° E 10.4005524516 °
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Tempe kirke

Valgrindvegen
7031 Trondheim (Lerkendal)
Norway
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Tempe kirke, Trondheim
Tempe kirke, Trondheim
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Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Norwegian University of Science and Technology

The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU; Norwegian: Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet) is a public university in Norway and the largest university by enrollment in the country. The university's headquarters campus is located in Trondheim, with regional campuses in Gjøvik and Ålesund.NTNU in its current form was established by the King-in-Council in 1996 by the merger of the former University of Trondheim and other university-level institutions, with roots dating back to 1760, and has later also incorporated some former university colleges. NTNU is consistently ranked in the top one percentage among the world's universities, usually in the 400–600 range depending on ranking. As of November 2022, the university has about 9,000 employees and 42,000 students.NTNU has the main national responsibility for education and research in engineering and technology, and is the successor of Norway's preeminent engineering university, the Norwegian Institute of Technology (NTH), established by Parliament in 1910 as Norway's national engineering university. In addition to engineering and natural sciences, the university offers higher education in other academic disciplines ranging from medicine, psychology, social sciences, the arts, teacher education, architecture and fine art. NTNU is well known for its close collaboration with industry, and particularly with its R&D partner SINTEF, which provided it with the biggest industrial link among all the technical universities in the world. The university's academics include three Nobel laureates in physiology or medicine: Edvard Moser, May-Britt Moser and John O'Keefe.