Copenhagen is one of the most densely populated areas of Denmark. The new City Circle Line (Cityringen) metro expands the city’s existing system, forming a key part of its drive to become carbon neutral by 2025. Metroselskabet, Copenhagen’s transit authority, appointed Arup in joint venture with Cowi and Systra to act as the multi-disciplinary technical advisor for the city’s largest construction project in over 400 years.
The new line seeks to encourage more residents out of their cars and onto a more environmentally friendly mass transit network. With over 16 kilometres of twin-bore tunnels and 17 new stations, Cityringen ensures most of Copenhagen’s residents are less than 600 metres from a train or metro station.
We led the architectural design with a user-centric ethos every step of the way. Our intuitive-minimalism, inspired by the Scandinavian design tradition, has led to spacious, light-filled stations with distinctive internal façades and materials that echo the spirit of the areas they connect.
Designed as a kit
We led the work across all 17 stations, approaching each one as a gigantic ‘kit-of-parts’. This resulted in a cost-effective, rational design and construction system with individual features and seamless journeys from street to platform.
Each station has its own unique identity and intuitive wayfinding that makes the metro easy to navigate even for children. Sculptural wall panels and cladding act as internal façades to facilitate passenger navigation and underline each station’s unique identity. Paying homage to the areas they serve, stations feature colours and materials that reflect the neighbourhood, such as the use of beautiful, fossil-embedded sand-coloured limestone panels at Marmorkirken and the application of bold red cladding to identify transfer stations.