Esbjerg
Esbjerg
Esbjerg is a municipality (Danish, kommune) in Region Syddanmark ("South Denmark Region") on the west coast of the Jutland peninsula in southwest Denmark. Its mayor is Johnny Søtrup, from the Venstre (Center-Right Party) political party. By January 1, 2007 the old Esbjerg municipality was, as the result of Kommunalreformen ("The Municipal Reform" of 2007), merged with the former Bramming and Ribe municipalities to form the new Esbjerg municipality. This municipality has an area of 741 km² (286 sq. miles) and a total population of 114,244 (2008).
King Christian IX
The main town and the site of its municipal council is the city of Esbjerg -
population 71,886 (2006), the fifth largest city in Denmark.
Post Office
Neighboring municipalities with land connection are Tønder to the south,
Haderslev to the southeast, Vejen to the east, and Varde to the north. The
neighboring municipality to the west is Fanø, an island municipality located in
Fanø Bay (Fanø Bugt). Beyond the island of Fanø and Fanø Bay is the North Sea.
street to the docks
Ferry services connect the Esbjerg via Ho Bay to Nordby on the island of Fanø via Scandlines, and over the North Sea to Harwich, England via DFDS Seaways.
railroad station
Esbjerg railway station is operated by Danish State Railways. Esbjerg is the western terminus of InterCity trains from Copenhagen (operating every other hour), with the journey taking about three hours. DSB also operates local trains to Fredericia. Arriva operates Vestbanen local trains south to Ribe and Tønder and north to Struer.
library
The city of Esbjerg is a large transport hub for both rail and road traffic, and is an important port for Danish North Sea oil offshore activity. It has an airport, and is a center for machine building. The municipality has a number of museums, theatres (staging opera, ballet and drama), and several libraries.
Esbjerg Museum
The city of Esbjerg was established around the harbor, which the state had
built in 1868 as a replacement for the harbor in Altona that had previously
been Denmark's most important North Sea harbour. In 1874 Esbjerg was connected
by rail to Fredericia and Varde.
The city has been voted "City of the Year" twice. The first time was in 1997
where the city was awarded the title because of the corporate work between
public and private companies. In 2006 the city was again awarded "City of the
Year". The second award was given due to the work and support of young talents.
The talents in sports, artwork and music have been given good support and given
the best facilities to develop their talent even further. The city holds an
annual music festival spanning two weekends (nine days) during mid-August and is
focused around the central Torvet Square which hosts the main stage. The
festival celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2006.
The city was once Denmark's biggest fishing harbor, and the harbor is still an
economic driving force in the town. Besides the fishing industry Esbjerg is also
the main city for Denmark's oil and offshore activities. Companies like Mærsk
Oil & Gas, Ramboll Oil & Gas, ABB A/S,COWI and Atkins Denmark all have offshore
related activities in the city.
children on a field trip
Esbjerg is one of the central towns of the University of Southern Denmark, a branch of Aalborg University and IT Academy West.
Text from Wikipedia
fish market
town hall
sidewalk art
railroad station
water tower