Dyrehavsbakken

Dyrehavsbakken (dän. Dyrehaven =Tierpark, short form: Cheeks) is a recreational park in Klampenborg at the outskirts of a town of the Danish capital Copenhagen.

The park was opened 1583 with the discovery of a natural source and is thereby the oldest still existing recreational park of the world. With the time settled themselves due to the large visitor inflow ever more businessmen at and in the course of the centuries developed the park to the mixture from classical and modern roundabouts, which are he today. To the attractions one of the oldest wood roller coasters of Europe belongs with the 1932 Rutschebanen taken in enterprise (Danish for roller coaster). The course exhibits additionally the characteristic that it is driven still by a Bremser.

The park does not have an admission fee, but required for each travel a price per unit and comes in such a way with approx. 2,7 million visitors annually directly behind the Tivoli Copenhagen on the second place of the Danish visitor favour. Under native ones the park is not least because of that, for Danish conditions, extremely favorable restaurants a meeting place for young and alto.

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coordinates: 55° 46 ' 30 " n. Break, 12° 34 ' 45 " o. L.

 

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