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How Copenhagen has just raised its city break game

As the city’s tourism organisation launches a pilot project, rewarding tourists for their green choices, our writer reminds us why the Danish capital is the perfect choice for a laid-back, sustainable city break

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Copenhagen
Copenhagen is one of Europe's great bike-friendly cities

My mum has offered me a city break of my choice for my 21st birthday and I settle on Copenhagen, a coastal city harmoniously blending Nordic and Scandinavian culture. Renowned for its easy-going lifestyle, green environment and indulgent pastries, the brightly coloured Danish capital seemed like the perfect place for a birthday treat.

 

Designed with the bicycle, rather than the car, in mind, Copenhagen is incredibly compact. With more than 550km of cycle paths and an abundance of pedestrianised streets, the city is almost entirely navigable by foot or bike, making for the ultimate sustainable city break. Wanting to take advantage of the active lifestyle, we opt for a hotel in the heart of the city centre.

 

With the Vesterbro district on one side and Copenhagen Centre on the other, CPH Hotel is about as central as you can get. With Tivoli Gardens, the Meatpacking District and Stroget all within a five-minute walk of the hotel, there isn’t any need to step foot on public transport. Our stay at CPH includes access to the neighbouring leisure centre’s swimming pool, complete with a daily breakfast of eggs, cheese and pastries in the courtyard restaurant. What’s more, Copenhagen Central Station is located just around the corner from the hotel, handy for direct airport transfers.  

Hannah Wild
Hannah explores Nyhavn, Copenhagen's 17th-century waterfront district

Our first day sees us embark upon some of the city’s top attractions, starting with lunch at a traditional, streetside Danish cafe and a visit to Our Saviour’s Church viewpoint. While the winding, external staircase is enough to make the smorrebrod I have just devoured churn in my stomach, the views are spectacular. From the summit we are able to see for miles – there’s a pleasing lack of skyscrapers, substituted instead by green spaces, canals and a glistening harbour.

 

Back safely on the ground, the city streets are peaceful, accompanied only by the occasional tinkering of bicycle bells and the chatter of locals picking up their children from school (one of the benefits of travelling in August when term time resumes – weekdays are rather quiet). With August temperatures averaging around 21ºC, these are ideal sightseeing conditions, with none of the uncomfortable stickiness often associated with European summer city breaks.

 

The following day sees us take a boat trip along the Nyhavn Canal and Copenhagen’s harbour, led by the tours and activities group, Stromma. Departing from Nyhavn, the canal tour takes visitors along Copenhagen’s harbour, a contemporary, newly developed waterfront that juxtaposes the picturesque, colourful 17th-century townhouses of Nyhavn. With unrivalled views of Amalienborg Castle and the Little Mermaid sculpture, the tour offers a way of seeing the city that can’t be experienced elsewhere. Sitting in an open-air boat under the glow of the summer sun, there really is no better way to experience the slower-paced lifestyle of Copenhagen than from the water.

After two days of carefully observing (and swerving) the erratic haste of Copenhagen’s cyclists, we decide it’s time to get our own bikes. Just outside our hotel is a station for the bike rental hire scheme Donkey Republic. We purchase bikes on a 24-hour deal, costing 129DKK (£14.82) each. Despite a rather apprehensive start we soon settle into the groove, spending the day cycling along the city’s cycle paths, and parking up to explore areas we’ve not yet discovered.

 

Pausing for lunchtime drinks at Copenhagen’s waterfront street food district, The Bridge Street Kitchen, cycling through the gardens of Amalienborg Castle and rounding off the day with an evening at Tivoli Gardens, this is undeniably a trip highlight. Not only does it enable us to expand our reach, but it gives us a very local viewpoint.

 

And that is what makes our time in Copenhagen so restorative – seeing locals swimming in the harbour, the swarm of commuters cycling to work in the morning and friends enjoying alfresco dinners in the trendy Meatpacking District. It’s easy to see why Copenhagen is renowned for its laid-back, happy and healthy lifestyle and offers a breath of fresh air from other more demanding city breaks.

 

Book it: EasyJet offers city breaks to Copenhagen from £332pp, for a three-night stay at the Annex Copenhagen, located between the Meatpacking and Vesterbro districts, with flights from Manchester, departing 7 October. easyjet.com/en/holidays

 

Convert green actions into currency for cultural experiences

Wonderful Copenhagen, the city's official tourism organisation, is rolling out CopenPay – a new pilot project that aims to incentivise visitors to make conscious green choices. Tourism bosses are hoping the scheme will help bridge the gulf between the desire to act sustainably and tourists' actual behaviour.

 

CopenPay rewards actions such as cycling, participating in clean-up efforts or volunteering at urban farms, with access to experiences including complimentary guided museum tours, free kayak rentals and a free vegetarian lunch made from locally grown crops. Visitors arriving at the National Gallery of Denmark with plastic waste are invited to a workshop to turn it into a piece of art. Taking public transport or a bike to Copenhagen's iconic heating plant grants the unique experience of skiing down its slope, located on the building’s roof.

 

Mikkel Aaro-Hansen, chief executive of Wonderful Copenhagen, says: “We want visitors to make conscious green choices, and hopefully to end up enjoying even better experiences while they visit. Through CopenPay, we therefore aim to incentivise tourists' sustainable behaviour while also enriching their cultural experience of our destination. It is an experimental – and a small – step towards creating a new mindset amongst travellers, and we hope to inspire other cities around the world to introduce similar initiatives.”

 

To participate, tourists can show a train ticket, arrive on a bicycle or present other simple proof of green actions to redeem their rewards. For updates on available attractions and rewards, see copenpay.com. The pilot scheme will run until Sunday 11 August. 

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