place

Berns Salonger

1863 establishments in SwedenBuildings and structures completed in 1863Culture in StockholmListed buildings in StockholmRestaurants in Stockholm
Berns salonger, framsidan
Berns salonger, framsidan

Berns Salonger is a restaurant and entertainment venue, in Berzelii Park, in central Stockholm, Sweden. The building was constructed from 1862 to 1863 by the architect Johan Fredrik Åbom for Robert Berns and extended in 1886. Berns often holds concerts and other shows and has a capacity of 1,200. Berns is the setting for the Strindberg novel The Red Room.

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

Berns Salonger
Berzelii Park, Stockholm Norrmalm (Norrmalms stadsdelsområde)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Berns SalongerContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 59.332166666667 ° E 18.073888888889 °
placeShow on map

Address

Berns

Berzelii Park
111 46 Stockholm, Norrmalm (Norrmalms stadsdelsområde)
Sweden
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
berns.se

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q826740)
linkOpenStreetMap (369976808)

Berns salonger, framsidan
Berns salonger, framsidan
Share experience

Nearby Places

Great Synagogue of Stockholm
Great Synagogue of Stockholm

The Great Synagogue of Stockholm (Swedish: Stockholms stora synagoga, Hebrew: בית הכנסת הגדול של שטוקהולם Bet ha-Knesset ha-Gadol shel Stokholm) is located on a small street called Wahrendorffsgatan, close to the park Kungsträdgården on Norrmalm, Stockholm. It was built 1867-1870 according to designs made in 1862 by the architect Fredrik Wilhelm Scholander. The building has been called a "paraphrase over Oriental motifs" (Nordisk familjebok 26, col. 1470 [1]), and it is listed in the Swedish registry of national historical buildings. It was preceded by an earlier synagogue at Tyska Brunnsplan in the Stockholm Old Town (now the Jewish Museum on 19, Själagårdsgatan), used 1790-1870, and services were held in an even earlier location on Köpmanbrinken near Köpmantorget in the Old town 1787-1790. The Judiska biblioteket, the Jewish Community Library, is located beneath the Great Synagogue of Stockholm. Its multilingual collection consists of books in Swedish, German, English, French, Hebrew, and other languages. It includes the library of Rabbi Marcus Ehrenpreis (1869–1951), who was Chief Rabbi of Sweden from 1914 to 1951. The Library also hosts occasional exhibits, such as the 2007 exhibit of the Friedrich Kellner World War II diary which chronicles the years of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust of European Jewry. A monument to the memory of victims of the Holocaust, with more than 8,000 names of victims who were relatives of Swedish Jews, was dedicated by the King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustav, at the synagogue in 1998.In 2017 a new mikvah was built in the basement of the synagogue.