Skip to content

Kongestien Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 1/7/2021
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


Tekst på dansk KONGESTIEN

Kongestien er egentlig en ganske almindelig villavej i en af Københavns mange forstæder, Sorgenfri. Den består af 76 etplanshuse - de fleste med røde tegltage og hvide vægge. Rundt om Kongestien er der andre villaveje med flere huse. Også dobbelthuse og rækkehuse. De tre veje øst for Kongestien er Hybenvej, Kvædevej og Kaplevej. 

Af disse fire veje blev Kongestien anlagt først – i 1941. Derefter fulgte de tre andre veje i 1942 og 1943. Lige vest for Kongestien ligger Frugthegnet med sine toetagers dobbelthuse fra 1952-53.

I 1941 da vejen og de første huse blev anlagt hed vejen Spurveskjulsbakken, og Kongestien var dengang faktisk en sti. En sti som Kong Christian X brugte som ridesti når han var på Sorgenfri slot. Den lå ca. 50 m vest for vejen i hvad som i dag er den bageste del af grundenes baghaver. Man kan faktisk stadig se rester af stien nogle steder.

En af de mest karakteristisk træk på Kongestien, udover selvfølgelig de næsten ens huse, er græsrabatterne i siden af vejen og det smalle fortov. Det giver en hyggelig og landsbyagtig stemning som beboerne sætter stor pris på.

De første huse på Kongestien blev opført under anden verdenskrig og er derfor bygget med begrænsede materialer og til folk med begrænsede mængder penge. Faktisk kostede de første 36 huse da de blev bygget under 20 000 kr. Arkitekten bag netop de første 36 huse og dermed også ham som har sat stilen for resten, er Mogens Lassen. Og han har såmænd også gjort Kongestien til noget helt specielt.

Mogens Lassen var optaget af at husene både skulle være interessante og funktionelle. Han ville gerne skabe en åben og atelieragtig stemning i husene. Det gjorde han blandt andet ved at lave et stort ovenlysvindue i stuen, og han satte køkkenet i direkte forbindelse med stuen uden adskillelse - noget som var klart ud over det sædvanlige dengang. Overgangen fra stuen mod haven blev også lavet som en glasskydedør. Men for at der skulle være mest mulig plads i stuen og åbenhed til haven kørte skydedøren på skinner på husets yderside.

Rent byggeteknisk var Kongestien også noget helt nyt. Husenes ydervægge var lavet med Lecablokke som der er pusset udenpå. Under krigen var der materialemangel og det gjorde at man måtte improvisere. Tagene på husene var som de første i Danmark lavet af beton. Taget på husene har en hældning på 23° hvilket giver en højde på 2,1 m i ved facaderne og ca. 3,7 m på det højeste punkt i midten af stuen. 

Alle disse innovationer og nyskabelser viste sig dog at være ikke helt uden problemer. Den første vinter efter husene var bygget begyndte teglstenene på taget at fryse i stykker fordi de var udlagt direkte i mørtel. Man blev derfor nødt til at lave taget om og i stedet lægge asfaltpap ovenpå betontaget. Så lagde man lægter som man monterede tagstenene på. Faktisk på samme måde som man gør det i dag.

Det var desværre ikke tagets eneste problem. Betontaget viste sig ikke at være stærk nok til at bære den enorme vægt og det begyndte at bøje på midten. Der medførte at taget ikke længere var lige, men i stede gik i en bue.

I dag er mange af de originale huse revet ned. Af dem som stadig står, er de fleste blevet totalrenoveret og tilbygget. De originale huse var kun 72 m², hvilket alligevel var lige knapt nok til en familie på 2 forældre og 2 børn som husene var tiltænkt.

------------

Cachen er en petling og indeholder logrullen og en blyant. Der er efter sidste vedligeholdelse ikke blyantspidser i cachen. Sørg for at placere den ordentligt igen når du er færdig så den er svær at se for uvedkommende. Pas på du ikke bliver set!

 

 

Text in English KONGESTIEN

Kongestien (Translated literally: King’s path) is actually just an ordinary residential street in one of Copenhagen’s many Suburbs; Sorgenfri. It consists of 76 single-storey houses – most with red tile roofs and white walls. Around Kongestien there are other residential roads with more houses. Also semi-detached houses and terraced houses. The three roads east of Kongestien are Hybenvej, Kvædevej and Kaplevej.

 Of these four roads, Kongestien was made first – In 1941. The three other roads then followed in 1942 and 1943. Just west of Kongestien is Frugthegnet with its two-storey semi-detached houses from 1952-53.

In 1941, when the road and the first houses were built, the road was called Spurveskjulsbakken, and Kongestien was actually a path at the time. A path that King Christian X used as a riding path when he was at Sorgenfri Castle. It was approx. 50 m west of the road in what is today the rear part of the properties’ backyards. One can actually still see remnants of the path in some places.

One of the most characteristic features of Kongestien, apart from the almost identical houses, of course, is the grass beds on the side of the road and the narrow sidewalk. It gives a cozy and village-like atmosphere which the residents greatly appreciate.

The first houses on Kongestien were built during World War II and are therefore built with limited materials and for people with limited amounts of money. In fact, the first 36 houses, when they were built, cost under DKK 20 000. The architect behind the first 36 houses and thus also the one who has set the style for the rest, is Mogens Lassen. And he has indeed also made Kongestien something very special.

Mogens Lassen was concerned that the houses should be both interesting and functional. He wanted to create an open and studio-like atmosphere in the houses. He did this, among other things, by making a large skylight in the living room, and he put the kitchen in direct connection with the living room without separation - something that was clearly out of the ordinary at the time. Transitions from the living room to the garden were also made as a sliding glass door. But in order to have as much space as possible in the living room and openness to the garden, the sliding door ran on rails on the outside of the house.

From a purely technical point of view, Kongestien was also something completely new. The outer walls of the houses were made with Leca blocks which have been plastered on the outside. During the war, there was a shortage of materials and that meant having to improvise. The roofs of the houses were the first in Denmark to be made of concrete. The roof of the houses has a slope of 23 ° which gives a height of 2.1 m  at the facades and approx. 3.7 m at the highest point in the middle of the living room.

However, all these innovations turned out to be not entirely without problems. The first winter after the houses were built, the bricks on the roof began to freeze to pieces because they were laid out directly in mortar. They, therefore, had to change the rooves and instead lay asphalt cardboard on top of the concrete roof. Then they laid battens on which to mount the roof tiles. In fact, in the same way, as one does today.

Unfortunately, that was not the roof's only problem. The concrete roof turned out not to be strong enough to carry the enormous weight and it started to bend in the middle. As a result, the roof was no longer straight but went in an arc.

Today, many of the original houses have been demolished. Of those that still stand, most have been completely renovated and extended. The original houses were only 72 m², which was after all barely enough for a family of 2 parents and 2 children as the houses were intended.

------------

The cache is a petling and contains the log roll and a pencil. After the last maintenance, there is no longer a sharpener in the cache. Make sure you place it properly again when you are done so it is hard to see for muggles. Be careful not to be seen!

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Qvat Qbat

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)