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Enjoy a brainy break: An academic’s guide to Stockholm

For some, December is the month best known for festive celebrations. In Stockholm, it’s the month where a select handful of the world’s most revered academics gather for the Nobel Prize Award Ceremony and Banquet.

Enjoy a brainy break: An academic’s guide to Stockholm
Photo: imagebank.sweden.se/Ola Ericson

But the fun doesn’t stop once the gourmet dinner has been served. Stockholm is a city with plenty to satisfy visitors who have even the most discerning of intellectual tastes.

Together with Visit Stockholm and Visit Sweden – which have recently launched custom city guides for high-profile guests and visitors based on their interests and reason for travelling – The Local presents a selection of the city’s most highbrow sights. 

Stockholm City Hall

The Nobel Prize banquet. Photo: imagebank.sweden.se/Jeppe Wikstrom

Your name may not be on the guestlist for this year’s banquet, but you can still admire the grand Blue Hall where it’s held every year. Take a guided tour of one of Stockholm’s most recognisable landmarks and walk the same halls as some of recent history’s brightest minds. 

Designed by the architect Ragnar Östberg and built between 1911 to 1923, Stockholm City Hall is an imposing feat of modern architecture. Its 106-meter tall tower, topped with a spire featuring three golden crowns, is to Stockholm’s cityscape what the Empire State Building is to New York City’s. The tower is only open during the summer months but you can tour the rest of the City Hall year round.

Click here to see Visit Stockholm's custom guides

Nobel Prize Museum

The Nobel Prize Museum. Photo: imagebank.sweden.se/Staffan Eliasson

As the hometown of Alfred Nobel himself, and the city where the Nobel Prizes are annually awarded, it’s no wonder that Nobel is an ever-present theme across the city. The Nobel Prize Museum on Stortorget in Stockholm’s Old Town is a shrine to courage, creativity and perseverance. Conceptualised around the Nobel Prize’s combination of fields – natural sciences, literature, and peace – the exhibitions in the small museum introduce you to freedom fighters, writers and scientists who have, over the course of the last hundred or so years, been recognised for their outstanding contributions to mankind.

Stop for some brainfood in the bistro and flip over your chair before you leave — each one has been autographed by a Nobel Laureate who has visited the museum.

Vinterviken

Vinterviken. Photo: Creative Commons

Continue your Nobel tour at Vinterviken, a now-pretty park on a plot of land once owned by the famed Swedish chemist. Alfred Nobel established his research laboratory and factory on the then-industrial area south of the city in the 1860s and spent much of the following decades working there, testing dynamite and carrying out other dangerous experiments. Today, you can still see the testing tunnels as well as the housing where factory workers lived. No longer an industrial testing ground, Vinterviken is now a picturesque park next to a sprawling bay in the Mälaren lake.

The City Library

City Library. Photo: imagebank.sweden.se/Jann Lipka

Bibliophiles will need a moment to catch their breath when they first step into the magnificent Stockholm City Library. Listed by Conde Nast Traveler magazine as one of the world’s most beautiful libraries, the building was designed by world-famous architect Gunnar Asplund in the ‘Swedish Grace’ neoclassical style. 

If the exterior – a geometric cube encasing an enormous cylinder – isn’t impressive enough, you’ll be blown away by the rotunda, the enormous round book hall housed within. Some 40,000 books line the wooden shelves and a large Orrefors glass chandelier – a gift from the Norstedts – hangs from the 24-metre high ceiling. 

Royal Coin Cabinet

If you’re a fan of all things financial, you’ll strike gold at Stockholm’s Royal Coin Cabinet. Dedicated to the history of money, finance and economy, it’s one of Sweden’s oldest collections, dating back to the 1570s. There are 650,000 objects from around the world, representing different periods throughout history. The collection is currently in the process of being relocated to the same building as the Swedish History Museum and will be on display again in late 2020.

Click here to see Visit Stockholm's custom guides

Bergius Botanic Garden

Bergius Botanic Garden. Photo: Creative Commons

Stockholm is a city perfect for people with all academic inclinations, whether you’re interested in economics, literature or plant diversity. The Bergius Botanic Garden at Brunnsviken, an inlet of the Baltic Sea in the National City Park, is a fountain of botanical knowledge owned and managed by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and Stockholm University. For obvious reasons, the gardens are best visited whilst in bloom but exotic plants continue to thrive year-round in the Victoria House and Edvard Anderson Conservatory. 

The Sweden Solar System

Ericsson Globe. Photo: imagebank.sweden.se/Ola Ericson

Most of us will never get the chance to travel in space but don’t let that stop you from exploring the solar system. The Sweden Solar System (SSS) is the world’s largest model of our planetary system on a scale of 1:20 million. The Ericsson Globe, the world’s largest spherical building, represents the sun, and you can find replicas of the inner planets in and around the outskirts of the city. Marvel at Mercury during your visit to Stockholm City Museum in Slussen, visit Venus at KTH Royal Institute of Technology and spot Jupiter as you hop on the plane home at Arlanda airport.

Visit Stockholm recently launched custom city guides for well-known visitors and tourists. Click here for the chance to have your very own city guide created by those who know Stockholm best.

This article was produced by The Local Creative Studio and sponsored by Visit Sweden and Visit Stockholm.

TRAVEL NEWS

German train strike wave to end following new labour agreement

Germany's Deutsche Bahn rail operator and the GDL train drivers' union have reached a deal in a wage dispute that has caused months of crippling strikes in the country, the union said.

German train strike wave to end following new labour agreement

“The German Train Drivers’ Union (GDL) and Deutsche Bahn have reached a wage agreement,” GDL said in a statement.

Further details will be announced in a press conference on Tuesday, the union said. A spokesman for Deutsche Bahn also confirmed that an agreement had been reached.

Train drivers have walked out six times since November, causing disruption for huge numbers of passengers.

The strikes have often lasted for several days and have also caused disruption to freight traffic, with the most recent walkout in mid-March.

In late January, rail traffic was paralysed for five days on the national network in one of the longest strikes in Deutsche Bahn’s history.

READ ALSO: Why are German train drivers launching more strike action?

Europe’s largest economy has faced industrial action for months as workers and management across multiple sectors wrestle over terms amid high inflation and weak business activity.

The strikes have exacerbated an already gloomy economic picture, with the German economy shrinking 0.3 percent across the whole of last year.

What we know about the new offer so far

Through the new agreement, there will be optional reduction of a work week to 36 hours at the start of 2027, 35.5 hours from 2028 and then 35 hours from 2029. For the last three stages, employees must notify their employer themselves if they wish to take advantage of the reduction steps.

However, they can also opt to work the same or more hours – up to 40 hours per week are possible in under the new “optional model”.

“One thing is clear: if you work more, you get more money,” said Deutsche Bahn spokesperson Martin Seiler. Accordingly, employees will receive 2.7 percent more pay for each additional or unchanged working hour.

According to Deutsche Bahn, other parts of the agreement included a pay increase of 420 per month in two stages, a tax and duty-free inflation adjustment bonus of 2,850 and a term of 26 months.

Growing pressure

Last year’s walkouts cost Deutsche Bahn some 200 million, according to estimates by the operator, which overall recorded a net loss for 2023 of 2.35 billion.

Germany has historically been among the countries in Europe where workers went on strike the least.

But since the end of 2022, the country has seen growing labour unrest, while real wages have fallen by four percent since the start of the war in Ukraine.

German airline Lufthansa is also locked in wage disputes with ground staff and cabin crew.

Several strikes have severely disrupted the group’s business in recent weeks and will weigh on first-quarter results, according to the group’s management.

Airport security staff have also staged several walkouts since January.

Some politicians have called for Germany to put in place rules to restrict critical infrastructure like rail transport from industrial action.

But Chancellor Olaf Scholz has rejected the calls, arguing that “the right to strike is written in the constitution… and that is a democratic right for which unions and workers have fought”.

The strikes have piled growing pressure on the coalition government between Scholz’s Social Democrats, the Greens and the pro-business FDP, which has scored dismally in recent opinion polls.

The far-right AfD has been enjoying a boost in popularity amid the unrest with elections in three key former East German states due to take place later this year.

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