Mikael Damkier/Shutterstock Before you walk over Stockholm’s 50-plus bridges or visit their ABBA museum, you need to put these architectural marvels on your must-see list. From a Neoclassical theater to a Modernist collective housing project to—if you dare—a crematorium that is a mix of both styles, these are the buildings you need to visit on your next trip to Stockholm.
Earlier versions of the descriptions of these buildings first appeared in 1001 Buildings You Must See Before You Die, edited by Mark Irving (2016). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.
Court Theater, Drottningholm PalaceThe 1766 exterior of the Court Theater at Drottningholm Palace, Sweden’s lakeside Versailles, is in an austere Neoclassical style. Built for Queen Lovisa Ulrika, the theater replaced an earlier one that burned down in 1762. A number of the rooms were altered in 1791 in the French style, with delicate colors, white and gold relief ornament, and a trompe l’oeil ceiling. The work was carried out for Queen Lovisa’s son, King Gustav III, by his French court architect, Louis-Jean Desprez. Despite its relatively large auditorium, the theater has more the air of a drawing room than of a public space. The deep stage allows for the use of painted scenery in the Italian Renaissance tradition, of which Drottningholm Palace has a unique collection from the 18th century. The stage machinery has also survived, including a special mechanism based on a ship’s capstan to remove one set of side wings and bring on another.
When Gustav III was assassinated in 1792, the theater fell out of use. In 1922 historian Agne Beijer rediscovered it and, recognizing its value, devoted the rest of his life to conserving the fabric of the building. Few 18th-century theaters survive in Europe, and, among these, only the one at Drottningholm has such a rich hoard of original scenery. The park contains other decorative buildings, including a fine Chinese pavilion. In 1991 the Royal Domain of Drottningholm was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage site. (Alan Powers)
Stockholm City Hall stands on the bank of Riddarfjärden, a bay of Lake Mälaren in central Stockholm. Archiect and designer Ragnar Östberg’s graceful architecture complements the site perfectly. Two courtyards link offices and ceremonial public spaces beneath the elegant, gently tapering 348-foot- (106-meter-) tall tower. The exterior uses dark red handmade bricks. The picturesque National Romantic southern facade, with its delicate windows, open colonnade, and golden crescent above a minor onion-dome tower, relate handsomely to the shimmering waters. The interior is an architectural hymn to Swedish arts and crafts. The Prince’s Gallery, so-called because of its fresco paintings by Prince Eugen of Sweden, has a colonnade of 15 pairs of dark marble pillars. The Blue Hall—its excellent brickwork was originally to be blue-plastered—is a covered courtyard, often used as a banqueting hall. Sixteenth-century French Tureholm tapestries adorn the Oval Room, which is used for civil weddings. The Council Chamber boasts an imitation open ceiling, reminiscent perhaps of Viking ships’ timbers. Östberg also commissioned Sweden’s finest craftsworkers to decorate and furnish the city hall, which took 12 years to construct and was completed in 1923.
Östberg’s design, using a low, massive, brick-built box with a dominant tower at the corner, was greatly influential outside Sweden; it can be seen reflected even in Art Deco and Modern factories, civic buildings, and public transit stations. (Aidan Turner-Bishop)
Stockholm Public LibraryStockholm Public Library architect Gunnar Asplund’s style has its origins in Neoclassical architecture, in particular the titanic scale of stripped-back schemes by the Frenchmen Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux. These 19th-century architects forged a Neoclassicism that is best remembered for colossal speculation and schemes that swamped their simple detailing with oversized Classical orders.
Public libraries were a new concept in 1920s Sweden, and Asplund went to the United States to research the topic. He noted that libraries were “the meeting place between people and books.”
Constructed as part of a designated cultural and administrative quarter around Observatoriekullen (Observatory Hill), Asplund’s library, completed in 1928, is, at its core, a cylinder contained within a box. The “box” is a three-story, U-shaped building, its facade divided horizontally with a monumental entrance and an ordered run of windows on the upper stories. Above it rises the cylindrical form of the reading room, reached from an internal staircase that ascends toward the rotunda; the approach is articulated so that visitors to the library feel they are ascending into a repository of intellectualism refined into pure geometry. The rings of bookshelves above culminate in a circular roof light. Detailing is minimal, as much a consequence of economic necessity as of Neoclassical purity. Asplund’s architecture is functional, but it presented a confrontational challenge to the functionalist orthodoxy of the Modernist movement of the time. (Jonathan Bell)
From the start of the 1930s, Modernist architecture flourished in Sweden. The Swedish architect Sven Markelius particularly favored a Functionalist style. He became involved in social housing and wanted to create architecture that emancipated women from their household chores. Childcare and cooking would be carried out in common kitchens and childcare centers.
The Collective House in central Stockholm comprises seven floors and sits in a line with neighboring apartment blocks. The yellow-plastered house consists of 57 apartments; some are single-bedroom apartments while others have two or four bedrooms. Due to the open and free planning of the interior, all appear spacious, even the smallest studio.
The childcare center and communal kitchen were located on the ground floor, where there was also a public restaurant. If a working woman did not have time to cook, she could order food from the restaurant, to be delivered by means of a small food lift straight into her apartment. Each apartment has its own balcony, which recesses from the exterior walls. With vertical sections of curved balconies next to the solid walls, Markelius created a shifting and also stringent pattern between the opened and the closed. There is room for privacy, but there is also space to observe what goes on outside. Behind the complex and away from the street is a communal courtyard and garden area.
The Collective House, completed in 1935, was the first of its kind in Sweden. Markelius’s social project and design was groundbreaking in its time, and it firmly steered Swedish Modernism and Functionalism toward an international group of Modernist colleagues within Europe. The house was thoroughly restored in 1991. (Signe Mellergaard Larsen)
Woodland CrematoriumThe Woodland Crematorium in Skogskyrkogården, a cemetery, is not only the swan song of architect Gunnar Asplund but also a mature illustration of his Modernist architectural style. The building is part of a burial complex that includes additional works by Asplund and architect Sigurd Lewerentz. The crematorium sits on a hilly tree-covered part of Stockholm. A spacious entrance and a large granite cross in the courtyard dominate the site. The complex is formed by three chapels: of Faith, Hope, and (a larger chapel) the Holy Cross, all linked by the main facilities area—the vault containing the funeral urns and the actual crematorium space. The varied-height volumes break up the facade into separate units, allowing the crematorium to subtly follow the hill’s slope. The complex’s serene clarity is also reflected in its furnishings, designed to be comfortable and functional but simple.
The Woodland Crematorium attracts worldwide attention from architects and historians for its elemental Modernist simplicity, in which the basic forms of the building blend harmoniously with the surrounding natural environment. It is a unique example of authentic monumentality and religious architecture. Asplund’s creation stands peacefully, joining Neoclassical and Modernist architecture, beauty and symbolism. (The architect himself was the first person to be cremated there.) In 1994 the complex was put on the UNESCO World Heritage list. (Ellie Stathaki)