Above: Colorful buildings along the canal

Delightful Copenhagen: An Update

Copenhagen is Scandinavia’s most sophisticated city and a world leader in urban innovation and conservation, as well as a delightful place in which to spend some time. At the end of my Danish road trip, I enjoyed a few days at the city’s best hotel, sampled some excellent new restaurants and revisited two favorite museums: the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek (for sculpture and painting) and Designmuseum Danmark (for decorative art and design). I also paid a visit to the remarkable store and gallery Designer Zoo, which boasts two vast floors of changing exhibits, plus seven active workshops, and is where Danish design and crafts are united under one roof.

I’d last stayed at the 92-room Hotel d’Angleterre in 2014, just after it had completed major renovations, and I was curious to see how things had settled down. The project was a real labor of love for owners Else Marie Remmen and her late husband, Henning. The $70 million makeover involved stripping the building down almost to its 18th-century frame, before re-creating it as a modern luxury hotel. Along the way, there were some wonderful discoveries, like a hidden balcony in the Palm Court and a 100-year-old ballroom with Europe’s largest glass mosaic roof. The main staircase was moved back to the center of the hotel, from where it had unaccountably strayed, and the lobby’s gold dome was restored and polished. Other more-predictable changes included the revamping of the Balthazar Champagne Bar and a wonderful indoor pool with an adjacent spa.

After an efficient and gracious check-in, we were escorted up to our Deluxe One-bedroom Suite, which had a light, bright and spacious sitting room with a purple velvet couch, taupe wall-to-wall carpeting and steel-gray brocade drapes at the pair of French doors that led to a long private terrace. A bouquet of roses in a crystal vase ornamented the coffee table. The bed came with twin duvets and two triple sets of pillows, while the bedroom provided a walk-in wardrobe and lots of built-in cupboards. The bath was equipped, perhaps surprisingly, with a combination tub and shower, plus two sinks set in a white-marble counter. Our stay at the Hotel d’Angleterre was a delight from beginning to end, but one highlight was a superb lunch at the Michelin one-star Marchal. (On no account miss the squid with oysters and caviar.)

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Above: Colorful buildings along the canal

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The Legoland That Started It All: Legoland Billund The Tranquil Charm of Denmark’s Countryside Denmark Museums