Superkilen is a public park in the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, Denmark. Designed by the Superflex arts group with the collaboration of Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) architects and a German landscape architecture firm called Topotek1, the park is considered one of the most ethnically diverse and socially challenged neighbourhoods in the Danish capital. Filled with objects from around the globe, it has been designed as a world exposition for local inhabitants, covering over 60 nationalities, who have been able to contribute their own ideas and artefacts to the project.
Many of the objects in the park have been specially imported or copied from foreign designs. They include swings from Iraq, benches from Brazil, a fountain from Morocco and litter bins from England. There are neon signs from around the world advertising everything from a Russian hotel to a Chinese beauty parlour. Even the manhole covers come from Zanzibar, Gdansk and Paris. In all, there are 108 plants and artefacts illustrating the ethnic diversity of the local population.
“When our team was invited to propose a project in this neighbourhood, we realised that we had to do more than just urban design. Rather than plastering the urban area with Danish designs we decided to gather local intelligence and global experience to create a display of global urban best practice comprising of the best that each of the 60 different cultures and countries have to offer when it comes to urban furniture.” said Nanna Gyldholm Møller, the project leader for BIG.