100 Sights in Stockholm, Sweden (with Map and Images)
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Explore interesting sights in Stockholm, Sweden. Click on a marker on the map to view details about it. Underneath is an overview of the sights with images. A total of 100 sights are available in Stockholm, Sweden.
Sightseeing Tours in StockholmActivities in Stockholm1. Fotografiska
Book Ticket*Fotografiska is a centre for contemporary photography in the Södermalm district of Stockholm, Sweden that was founded by brothers Jan and Per Broman and opened on 21 May 2010. In March 2021, it merged with NeueHouse and is operated by Yoram Roth and Josh Wyatt under the parent company CultureWorks.
2. Skansen
Book Ticket*Skansen is the oldest open-air museum and zoo in Sweden located on the island Djurgården in Stockholm, Sweden. It was opened on 11 October 1891 by Artur Hazelius (1833–1901) to show the way of life in the different parts of Sweden before the industrial era.
3. Birger Jarl
Book Free Tour*The statue of Birger Jarl is a statue depicting the Earl of Sweden and the regent Earl of Birger. The statue stands on Birger Jarl's Square on Riddarholmen in Stockholm. The statue was created by sculptor Bengt Erland Fogelberg and was unveiled on 21 October 1854.
4. Gamla stan
Gamla stan, until 1980 officially Staden mellan broarna, is the old town of Stockholm, Sweden. Gamla stan consists primarily of the island Stadsholmen. Officially, but not colloquially, Gamla stan includes the surrounding islets Riddarholmen, Helgeandsholmen and Strömsborg. It has a population of approximately 3,000.
5. Dance Museum
Dansmuseet is a museum for the performing and visual arts located in Stockholm, Sweden. Opened in 1953 in the basement of the Royal Swedish Opera, it originally displayed a large collection of dance-related art that belonged to Rolf de Maré, a leader of the Ballets suédois in Paris from 1920 to 1925. In 1969, a library, named after the Swedish dancer, Carina Ari was endowed by Ari and attached to the museum with Bengt Hägar as its curator. The library contains the most comprehensive archive of literature on dance in Northern Europe. The museum is currently located at Drottninggatan 17. The library, receives no state funds, as it is privately endowed. The majority of its collection are materials from Western Europe which date between 1500 and 1850, a journal collection dating at the turn of the 20th century, and a video library of thousands of films. There is also a large collection of books on Russian dance. As of 2017, the director of the museum is Eva-Sofi Ernstell.
6. Skanskvarns luftvärnsställning
Skanskvarn's anti-aircraft position in Stockholm was located in the district of Årsta on the hill north of Gullmarsvägen, about 400 meters west of Gullmarsplan and above the allotment association Stugan. The facility consisted of foxholes and gun emplacements as well as tank obstacles. The facility was in a "live situation" during the years of preparedness from 1939 to 1945. The main task of Skanskvarn's anti-aircraft position was to defend the Skansbron and Skanstull bridges as well as the important railway connection Årstabron. If the defenses had collapsed, the idea was to blow up the Årsta Bridge before the enemy could use it. Today (2011) there are two distinct play sites left, while the rest have been demolished or closed. The name derives from the nearby Skanskvarn.
7. Bonde Palace
The Bonde Palace is a palace in Gamla stan, the old town in central Stockholm, Sweden. Located between the House of Knights (Riddarhuset) and the Chancellery House (Kanslihuset), it is, arguably, the most prominent monument of the era of the Swedish Empire (1611–1718), originally designed by Nicodemus Tessin the Elder and Jean De la Vallée in 1662-1667 as the private residence of the Lord High Treasurer Gustaf Bonde (1620–1667) it still bears his name, while it accommodated the Stockholm Court House from the 18th century and since 1949 houses the Swedish Supreme Court. On the south side of the building is the street Myntgatan and the square Riddarhustorget, while the alleys Riddarhusgränd and Rådhusgränd are passing on its western and eastern sides.
8. Saint Eric's Cathedral
Saint Eric's Cathedral is a Catholic cathedral in Stockholm, Sweden. It is located on Södermalm, the southern part of central Stockholm. It was built in 1892 and was raised to the status of a cathedral in 1953, when the Catholic Diocese of Stockholm was created. The substantial increase in the number of Catholics in Stockholm and Sweden, mostly as a result of immigration after World War II, made the old church insufficient, and an extension, designed by architects Hans Westman and Ylva Lenormand, was inaugurated in 1983, at the 200th anniversary of the re-establishment in 1783 of the Catholic Church in Lutheran Sweden. The block where the cathedral is located also contains other functions serving the Catholic Church in Sweden.
9. Dianafontänen I
The Diana Fountain is a bronze and marble sculpture by Carl Milles. The Diana Fountain is available in two versions, the Diana Fountain I was created in 1927–1928 and is located in the courtyard of the Match Palace in Stockholm, the Diana Fountain II was created in 1929–1930 and can be found as a copy at Skytteholm, Ekerö Municipality. On the square in Tomelilla there is a Diana fountain that was donated by Milles to the town when he learned that the town intended to name a street after him as a memory of the Tomelilla exhibition in 1927. In Tomelilla, the sculpture is called Artemis after Diana's Greek counterpart. "Diana" also exists as a single figure in bronze, fitted with a skirt.
10. Hornsbergs strandpark
Hornsbergs strandpark is a park along Ulvsundasjön on Kungsholmen in Stockholm, Sweden. The park was part of the programme for Northwest Kungsholmen and was built on filled land in Ulvsundasjön and was created partly for the new residential area at Hornsbergs strand and partly to connect the walkway around Kungsholmen, which was previously interrupted by an industrial area and a port facility on northwestern Kungsholmen. The park was inaugurated on May 16, 2012. Hornsberg Beach Park was awarded the Siena Prize in 2012. The high-rise building at Moa Martinsons Torg was nominated for Stockholm Building of the Year 2013 and came in second place in the voting, architect Alessandro Rippelino.
11. Bünsowska huset
The Bünsow House is an exclusive apartment block located on Strandvägen 29–33 in Östermalm in central Stockholm, built in 1886–1888 for the timber magnate and millionaire Friedrich Bünsow after drawings by the architects Isak Gustaf Clason (facades) and Anders Gustaf Forsberg (the plans). The building complex occupies the entire Korporalen block, which is surrounded by Riddargatan to the north, Grev Magnigatan to the west, Torstenssonsgatan to the east and Strandvägen to the south. The property is blue-labeled by the City Museum in Stockholm, which is the strongest protection and means "that the buildings are judged to have particularly high cultural-historical values".
12. Museum of Ethnography
The Museum of Ethnography, in Stockholm, Sweden, is a Swedish science museum. It houses a collection of about 220,000 items relating to the ethnography, or cultural anthropology, of peoples from around the world, including from China, Korea, South and Southeast Asia, the Pacific region, the Americas and Africa. The museum is situated in Museiparken at Gärdet in Stockholm. Since 1999, it is a part of Swedish National Museums of World Culture and is also hosting the Sven Hedin Foundation. The museum is open Tuesday to Sunday 11:00AM – 5:00 PM, and Wednesdays 11:00 AM – 8:00 PM and is closed on Mondays.
13. Karl Staaffs Park
Karl Staaffs park is a park in Norrmalm in central Stockholm, Sweden, located at the intersection of Birger Jarlsgatan and Regeringsgatan. The place where the square and Eriksbergsplan on the other side of Birger Jarlsgatan are located was previously known as Träsktorget, where the pillory for public punishment was placed for a time. The small park was originally named Spårvägsparken after a relief kiosk for tram staff located on the site and AB Stockholms Spårvägar's head office nearby. A smaller building designed by Nils Cronholm housed John A. Bergendahl's Birger Jarl biographer from 1912.
14. Betlehemskyrkan
Bethlehem Church is the Swedish Evangelical Mission's church in Stockholm, Sweden. The old church building was consecrated in October 1840 as Sweden's first free church building, under the name Engelska kapellet. It was located near Hötorget in Norrmalm, where the second and third Hötorget buildings are now located and was taken over by the Swedish Evangelical Mission in connection with the founding of the organization in 1856. The church was demolished in 1953 in conjunction with the redevelopment of Norrmalm. The new church was consecrated in 1956 at Luntmakargatan in Vasastan.
15. Fredhällsparken
Fredhällsparken is a park in the district of Fredhäll, in central Stockholm, Sweden. The main part of the park is located north of Fredhäll's buildings in line with Adlerbethsgatan, and below Drottningholmsvägen. The cliff edge in the south down towards Essingesundet is also included in the park, as well as the green areas between the houses in the Träslottet block. From Fredhällsparken, a footpath goes east under the Essingeleden towards Rålambshovsparken. Construction work for the park began in the early 1930s and it took over 30 years to complete.
16. Husbykyrkan
The Husby Church in Husby, Stockholm was designed by architect Karl Erik Hjalmarson and was inaugurated in 1976. The building is green labeled by the City Museum in Stockholm, which means a "high cultural-historical value and means that the buildings are particularly valuable from a historical, cultural-historical, environmental or artistic point of view". Husby Free Church Congregation has about 290 members, has the vision of being "A House of Prayer for All Peoples" and is affiliated with the Evangelical Free Church.
17. Balders Hage
Balder's hage is a park in Lärkstaden in Östermalm, Stockholm, Sweden. The park was part of the city plan for a new residential area in the area around Lärkstaden, which was presented in 1902 by the architect Per-Olof Hallman. Hallman was influenced by the Austrian architect Camillo Sitte's ideas about artistic urban planning. The buildings had to be adapted to the formations of the terrain and the scale was smaller than traditional, with quiet streets, terraces, small squares and parks. The park was named in 1925.
18. Kronprinsesse Märthas kirke
Crown Princess Märtha's Church is a church building in the Stammen district of Södermalm, Stockholm. It is run by Sjømannskirken, the Church of Norway's international ministry, and is named after Crown Princess Märtha of Norway. The entrance is from Stigbergsgatan 24, but the building can also be seen far above Renstiernas gata which is located below. The building is blue-labeled by the City Museum in Stockholm, which means "that the buildings are considered to have particularly high cultural-historical values".
19. Karsviks Östergård
Karsvik or Karsviks by is the name of a farm that in the 1500s was located in Norra Ängby in Bromma, Västerort. At that time, the farm was located on the northern shore of the now disappeared Ängby Lake. The village of Karsvik was located in the eastern part of the present park, Karsviks hage. Östergården's manor house is still standing. Nowadays, the farm and the later built side building are used by the Mälar Scouts, who hold their scout meetings in Karsvik's pasture, which was newly renovated in 1995.
20. La Mano
La Mano is a memorial in Stockholm commemorating the Swedes who died during the Spanish Civil War, most of whom fought in the Thälmann Battalion. It stands next to Katarinavägen on Södermalm. The monument was created by Liss Eriksson and made by him together with Göran Lange and was completed in 1977. Göran Lange has also made the map of Spain in stone, which can be found on the ground next to the statue. On it are engraved the most important kinds, and they are mentioned in the quotation on the pedestal:
21. Väskberget i Hammarbyhöjden
The neighborhood of the ceiling lamp is one block at Finn Malmgrens road 87 and 89 and 116 and 118 in Björkhagen in Stockholm municipality. The neighborhood is surrounded by Finn Malmgren's road in the west, Nackare reserve in the east, Karlsborgsvägen in the south and Hammarbybacken in the northwest. The neighborhood consists of the property ceiling lamp 1 and is one of ten new construction projects in Stockholm municipality, which was nominated for this year's Stockholm building 2018.
22. Ekermanska malmgården
Ekermanska malmgården is an estate located on Södermalm in Stockholm, Sweden. Malmgården is located in the Ekermanska gården block between Ringvägen, Ekermans gränd and the Southern Main Line. Today, Malmgården is the homestead museum for Högalid's local history association. The building is blue-classified by the City Museum in Stockholm, which means that the buildings have "particularly high cultural-historical values" corresponding to the requirements for listed buildings.
23. Gustaf Vasa Church
Gustaf Vasa Church is a church located in the Vasastaden district of Stockholm, Sweden. Inaugurated in 1906 and named after 16th century King Gustav Vasa, it was designed by architect Agi Lindegren in the Baroque Revival style. Situated between two busy avenues partially lined with trees, its dome rises 60 metres (200 ft) above the nearby Odenplan plaza. The floor plan is in the shape of a Greek cross and seats 1,200 people, making it one of the largest churches in Stockholm.
24. Sankt Sigfrids kyrka
Sankt Sigfrids kyrka is a church building on Sigfridsvägen/Alvastravägen 8 in Aspudden, Stockholm Municipality, Sweden. The church was moved from Tulegatan/Frejgatan in Vasastaden in 1904. The name of the church was then St. Stephen's Chapel. As a movable small church in a simple carpentry technique with red-painted wooden walls, the church shows similarities to the prefabricated carpentry villas of the time. The building was declared a listed building in February 1993.
25. Gröndals kyrka
Gröndal Church is a church in the Diocese of Stockholm, Sweden. The building is constructed of reddish-brown brick and is located in the middle of Gröndal with the address Gröndalsvägen 61, corner Lövholmsvägen. The building was green-labelled by the City Museum in Stockholm, which means "that the buildings have a high cultural-historical value and are particularly valuable from a historical, cultural-historical, environmental or artistic point of view".
26. Bacchus 6
The Bacchus block is a neighbourhood in Stockholm, Sweden. The block is surrounded by Österlånggatan in the west, Brunnsgränd in the north, Skeppsbron in the east and Skottgränd in the south. The area for today's Bacchus block came into being after the 1640s when the East City Wall was demolished and new buildable land was built on partially filled land along Skeppsbron. North of the block in today's Diana neighborhood was the medieval Fiskartorget.
27. Kullskolan
Barnhusbarnet 1 is a school property at Nordenflychtsvägen 20-22 next to Kristineberg Castle on northwestern Kungsholmen in Stockholm. The house was built as a girls' home between 1906 and 1907 on the hill south of the castle, which is why it is also called "Kullskolan". The property is green marked by the Stockholm City Museum and was deemed "to be particularly valuable from a historical, cultural-historical, environmental or artistic point of view".
28. Eriksbergsparken
Eriksbergsparken is a park in Östermalm in the informal area of Eriksberg in central Stockholm. The park was laid out in 1920 under the authority of city gardener Mauritz Hammarberg and is adjacent to Eriksbergsplan, formerly Träsktorget. The park is designed as a staircase up to a terrace with plantings and a fountain. Above the park is the building of the Order of Carpenters. On the other side of Birger Jarlsgatan is Karl Staaff's park.
29. Sätra vattentorn
Sätra Water Tower is a water reservoir in Sätra in southern Stockholm. With its high location, the water tower in Sätra is a landmark in the whole of southwest Stockholm and can be seen all the way to Ekerö. The water tower is located within the Sätraskogen nature reserve. The building is blue-labeled by the City Museum in Stockholm, which means "that the buildings are considered to have particularly high cultural-historical values".
30. China Theatre
Chinateatern or commonly known as "China" is a private theatre in Stockholm, Sweden, located at Berzelii Park in Stockholm city. Originally built 1928 as a movie theatre but has over the years simultaneously been used as a theatre stage for revues, comedies and musical shows. It was very popular in the 1980s and the stage has during various periods been used by different established Swedish theatres, one being the Royal Dramatic Theatre.
31. Engelska parken
The English park at Norra Djurgården is one of Stockholm's most hidden parks. It is behind the Royal Institute of Technology's largest lecture hall F1 (Alfvénsalen) on a terrace above the adjacent Lill-Jansskogen. The park is reached from the south via a hole in the wall from Lindstedtsvägen, from the north via a terrace behind the building on Teknikringen 24, or from the west via a staircase from the open space Övre Borggården.
32. Katarina Elevator
The Katarina Elevator or Katarina Lift is a passenger elevator in Stockholm that connects Slussen to the heights of Södermalm. The lift was a shortcut between Katarinavägen, Slussen and Mosebacke torg. The original lift was constructed in 1881, but the current structure dates from the rebuilding of the Slussen transport interchange in 1936. The lift was closed for a lengthy renovation in 2010 and reopened in October 2023.
33. Karl XIII
Karl XIII's statue stands in Kungsträdgården in Stockholm. It was made by Erik Gustaf Göthe and was erected on 5 November 1821 as a monument to King Karl XIII. It was commissioned by King Karl XIV Johan, and at his expense. Karl XIV Johan was Karl XIII's adopted child and it was precisely for the anniversary of the adoption that the statue was unveiled. The statue is managed by the National Property Board of Sweden.
34. Tensta konsthall
Tensta konsthall is a center for contemporary art in the Stockholm suburb of Tensta, northwest of the city center. The gallery works with artists from both Sweden and abroad, often in conjunction with local associations and organizations in the area. Artists who have exhibited in the gallery include Tris Vonna-Michell, Iman Issa, Shirin Neshat, International Festival, Marie-Louise Ekman, Diana Thater, and Oda Projesi.
35. Carl Michael Bellman's Well
Bellmanskällan is a fountain at the intersection of Pettersbergsvägen and Bellmanskällevägen in Mälarhöjden in Stockholm, Sweden. The source has been mentioned in writing since 1803. However, local tradition states that its existence dates back to the time of Carl Michael Bellman and that the source is identical to the one that the poet writes about in Fredman's epistle N:o 82: "Vila vid denna källa" from 1790.
36. Gamla Auktionsverket
Gamla Auktionsverket consists of four houses built together on Riddarholmen in central Stockholm. The oldest building dates back to the 1750s. The Old Auction House is located on the waterfront in the western part of the island between Birger Jarl's tower and the Wrangel Palace, below Schering Rosenhane's Palace. The property is currently (2015) occupied by the Svea Court of Appeal and the Chancellor of Justice.
37. Intiman
Intiman, formerly Wallmans Intiman, is a private theatre located at Odenplan in Stockholm, Sweden. The theatre was inaugurated in 1950 by Lorens Marmstedt and Alf Jörgensen and was taken over in 1966 by Sandrews. In 1997, Hasse Wallman became the theatre manager for Intiman, and the theatre was renamed Wallmans Intiman. In 2010, the Wallmans Group was acquired by 2Entertain, which reinstated the original name.
38. Nybohovs vattenreservoar
Nybohov Water Reservoir is a water reservoir in the Liljeholmen district of Stockholm, Sweden. In connection with the development of Nybohovsberget, where the reservoir is located, with high-rise buildings in the late 1950s, a major rebuilding of the facility began. In 1957 and 1963, the original Triangular Reservoir was demolished to make way for a larger one. The Nybohov reservoir currently holds 72,200 m³.
39. Flygarmonumentet
The Aviator Monument is a statue that stands at Karlaplan in central Stockholm, Sweden. The statue was a gift from the Swedish Aeronautical Society in memory of different Swedish aviation pioneers who fell in both the North Pole expedition of 1898 and in the Swedish aviator era in 1917. The task to build the monument was given to the famous sculptor Carl Milles. The Aviator Monument was finished in 1931.
40. Domarringen i Skärholmen
Domarringen in Skärholmen is a burial ground from the Bronze Age and the Iron Age located at Stävholmsgränd in southern Stockholm. The burial site was investigated in 1966-1967. The stone ring in Skärholmen is unique as a form of burial in Stockholm, which is why the outer stone wreath was rebuilt after the excavation while the rest of the burial ground was removed to make room for terraced houses.
41. Eriksdalslunden
Eriksdalslunden is a park and allotment garden area on Södermalm in central Stockholm. The park is located between Eriksdalsbadet and Ringvägen and the allotment area stretches all the way down and west along Årstaviken from Eriksdalsbadet in the east to Södra Årstalunden's allotment area in the west. In Eriksdalslunden's allotment area there is also a kiosk from the Stockholm Exhibition in 1897.
42. Biological Museum
Biologiska museet is a museum located in Djurgården in Stockholm. It exhibits a collection of stuffed European birds and mammals in dioramas. Some of the diorama backgrounds were created by artist Bruno Liljefors, known for his dramatic paintings of Scandinavian wildlife. The museum was built in 1893 after a design by architect Agi Lindegren who was inspired by medieval Norwegian stave churches.
43. Engelbrekt Church
Engelbrekt Church is a protected church located in the Lärkstaden area of Stockholm, Sweden. Its located at Östermalm and belongs to the Church of Sweden and is parish church for Engelbrekt Parish in the Diocese of Stockholm. It was designed by architect Lars Israel Wahlman in the National Romantic style and completed in 1914. It is one of the largest churches in Stockholm, with 1,400 seats.
44. Snösätra graffiti
Snösätra edition area is an industrial area in southern Stockholm, located along both sides of Snösätragränd in Rågsved's free area between Rågsved's center and Lake Magelungen in the district area Enskede-Årsta-Vantör. Since 2014, the area has become a center for graffiti and street art and facades and walls in the area has been painted with the state of the property owners.
45. Sofia kyrka
Sofia Church, named after the Swedish queen Sophia of Nassau, is one of the major churches in Stockholm, Sweden. It was designed during an architectural contest in 1899 and was inaugurated in 1906. It is located in the eastern part of the island of Södermalm, standing on the north east peak of the Vita Bergen park. Sofia church belongs to Sofia parish of the Church of Sweden.
46. FN-monumentet
The UN Monument is a memorial dedicated to the Swedes who have died in UN service, located on the shores of Djurgårdsbrunnsviken, near the Maritime Museum, at Gärdet in Stockholm. The monument was inaugurated in 1995. On 29 May, Veterans' Day is commemorated annually in connection with the UN monument and the veterans' memorial Restare, which was built in 2013 nearby.
47. Kolerakyrkogården
The cholera cemetery was a cholera cemetery near Skanstull in Stockholm, Sweden, which was used from 1809 to 1901. Many victims of Stockholm's two cholera epidemics in 1834 and 1853 were buried here – hence the name. The cholera cemetery is now one of Stockholm's parks along Olaus Magnus väg and the street Hammarbybacken, located east of Gullmarsplan in Johanneshov.
48. Citykyrkan
Citykyrkan is a Pentecostal church at Adolf Fredriks kyrkogata 10 in Stockholm, a few blocks from Hötorget. The congregation was founded in 1936 as Östermalms Fria Församling. It was for a time affiliated with the Philadelphia congregation. The building, which the congregation purchased in 1940, is an old entertainment venue formerly known as the Phoenix Palace.
49. Fåfängan
Fåfängan is a viewpoint with a restaurant and café located on the mountain near Danviken as far east as you can get to Södermalm in Stockholm. With its tree framing of chasted lime, which is visible from a long distance, it is a characteristic element in Stockholm's city landscape. When the restaurant is open, the four flags are hoisted on top of the mountain.
50. Ormberget
Ormberget is a mountain and a residential and park area in northern Gröndal in Stockholm with culturally and historically valuable buildings from the turn of the century 1900. Ormberget's highest point is 43 metres above Lake Mälaren. Up until the beginning of the 1900s, there was a small lake in the valley between Mörtviken and Lake Trekanten called Ormsjön.
51. Willy Brandts park
Willy Brandts Park is a small park in Hammarbyhöjden, Stockholm. It is named after former German Chancellor Willy Brandt, who lived in the area in the 1940s during his exile from Nazi Germany. The park got its current name in 1997. A sculpture by German artist Rainer Fetting depicting Willy Brandt has been erected in the park and was unveiled on June 14, 2007.
52. Stockholm Mosque
Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan's Mosque, commonly known as the Stockholm Mosque or the Stockholm Grand Mosque, is the largest mosque in Stockholm, Sweden. It is located at Kapellgränd 10, adjacent to the small park Björns trädgård, in the Södermalm district of Stockholm. Inaugurated in 2000, the mosque is administered by the Islamic Association in Stockholm.
53. Brovaktarparken
Brovaktarparken is a park under the Essingeleden Trail in Stockholm, Sweden. The bridge keeper's park is named after the Brovakten block, which in turn is named after the still preserved guardhouse, Lilla Hornsberg next to the Karlberg Canal, which belonged to the ore farm Stora Hornsberg. The park was nominated for Stockholm Building of the Year in 2014.
54. Årstafruns park
Årstafuns Park is a park in the district of Årsta in Söderort within Stockholm municipality. The park is located at the intersection Åmänningevägen/Årstavägen and the intersection Åmänningevägen/Bränningevägen. It was named in 2010 after Årstafrun, Märta Helena Reenstierna, who was a diary author and manor owner, resident at Årsta farm.
55. Skansen allotments
Skansen's allotment garden is an allotment garden located at Skansen in Stockholm. The allotment garden consists of two lots, each with its own period cottage. The colony was established in 1997 on the outskirts of Skansen's city quarter. The location symbolises the historic location of Sweden's allotment gardens in the area between town and country.
56. Tenstakyrkan
Tensta Church is a free church located in Tensta, northwest of Stockholm. It belongs to the Tensta Church's Mission Congregation, a part of the Uniting Church of Sweden. Significant for the church is its rich musical life with a strong foothold in gospel, social work and the diversity of different denominations of Christianity in the same community.
57. Filadelfiakyrkan
Filadelfiakyrkan is a Pentecostal church building at Rörstrandsgatan 7 in Stockholm, Sweden; it was dedicated on 2 November 1930. The building is owned by the Filadelfia Stockholm congregation, the largest congregation in the Swedish Pentecostal movement with about 5,400 members as of 2015. It is also the largest Pentecostal congregation in Europe.
58. The English Church
St Peter and St Sigfrid's Church, often referred to locally as the English Church, is an Anglican church in Stockholm, Sweden. It was built in the 1860s for the British congregation in the city and was originally located on Rörstrandsgatan in the Norrmalm district before being moved, stone by stone, to the Diplomatstaden area of Östermalm in 1913.
59. Swedish Army Museum
The Swedish Army Museum is a museum of military history located in the district of Östermalm in Stockholm. It reopened in 2002 after a long period of closure, and was awarded the title of the best museum of Stockholm in 2005. Its displays illustrate the military history of Sweden, including its modern policy of neutrality, and of the Swedish Army.
60. Åkeshovs slott
Åkeshov Palace is located in Bromma, a borough of Stockholm, Sweden. It is lokated in the Judarskogen nature reserve. Historically, Åkeshov was situated in Bromma socken, which was incorporated with the City of Stockholm in 1916. After having undergone a careful reconstruction, the palace is used today as a hotel and conference facility.
61. Stora Blecktornsparken
Stora Blecktornsparken is a park in central Stockholm, Sweden. It is located south of Lilla Blecktornsparken and is bounded to the west by Kanalplan and to the east by Vintertullstorget. The park is named after the ore farm Stora Blecktornet, which is located in the western part of the park. The park is popularly known as "Stora Bleckan".
62. Kammarrättens hus
The Administrative Court of Appeal is a neoclassical building at Birger Jarls torg 13 on Riddarholmen in Stockholm. The building was erected in 1804 for the Administrative Court of Appeal in Stockholm after the Riddarholmen fire in 1802 on the site of the Administrative Court of Appeal's previous building, the burnt down Cruuska Palace.
63. Kyrkan vid Brommaplan
The church at Brommaplan is the church building for Bromma Baptist Church. The church is located at Drottningholmsvägen 400, at the Brommaplan roundabout, in Bromma in Västerort within the municipality of Stockholm. The congregation was founded in 1949 and since 2011 belongs to the Uniting Church, formerly the Swedish Baptist Church.
64. Åkeshovs arboretum
Åkeshov Arboretum is an arboretum in Bromma, Stockholm, Sweden, built during the 1998 European Capital of Culture year in Stockholm. It is a rectangular area near Åkeshov Metro Station, Åkeshov Castle and Judarskogen Nature Reserve, about 100 meters west of the castle next to the metro route with a dog stable on the south side.
65. Strindberg Museum
The Strindberg Museum is a museum in Stockholm, Sweden. It is dedicated to the writer August Strindberg (1849-1912) and located in his last dwelling. The site is in the building he nicknamed "Blå tornet" at Drottninggatan 85 on the corner of Drottninggatan and Tegnérgatan in the borough of Norrmalm in central Stockholm.
66. Mariebergsparken
Mariebergsparken is a park at Kungsholmen in Stockholm. The park is located in the Marieberg area just west of Västerbron and Smedsudden. It was named in 1938. On May 30, 2022, the Stockholm City Building Board changed the name of part of the park to Fria Ukraine's location after Russia's invasion of Ukraine 2022.
67. Katarina kyrka
Katarina kyrka is one of the major churches in central Stockholm, Sweden. The original building was constructed 1656–1695. It has been rebuilt twice after being destroyed by fires, the second time during the 1990s. The Katarina-Sofia borough is named after Katarina Parish and the neighbouring parish of Sofia.
68. Gotlandsparken
Gotlandsparken is a park in Södermalm, Stockholm, Sweden. It is located like a string between the Monument and Obelisken blocks and is enclosed by Gotlandsgatan, which is designed as a turning loop here. The park is quite unpretentious with a playground and a few park benches. It was last refurbished in 2000.
69. Colour Factory
Färgfabriken is an art gallery for contemporary art, architecture, social issues and urban development. The art gallery is located on Lövholmen, a former industrial area in Liljeholmen, Stockholm Municipality. Until the 1970s, the premises housed the paint manufacturer Beckers, hence the name Färgfabriken.
70. Ölands windmill
Skansen's mills consist of three windmills and a water mill that can be found at the open-air museum Skansen in Stockholm. These are two post mills from Torslunda and Glömminge parishes, western Öland, a hollow mill from Främmestad parish in Västergötland and a water mill from Viske district in Halland.
71. De fyra elementen
The Four Elements is a monumental mobile sculpture created by the American sculptor Alexander Calder in 1961. The sculpture is a motorized moving group of four metal sheets. The artwork is about 30 feet high. The sheets are painted in plain colours. This sculpture is made after a Calder model from 1938.
72. Bergianska trädgården
The Bergianska trädgården, the Bergian Garden or Hortus Bergianus, is a botanical garden located in the Frescati area on the outskirts of Stockholm, close to the Swedish Museum of Natural History and the main campus of Stockholm University. The director of the garden is known as Professor Bergianus.
73. National Library of Sweden
The National Library of Sweden is Sweden's national library. It collects and preserves all domestic printed and audio-visual materials in Swedish, as well as content with Swedish association published abroad. Being a research library, it also has major collections of literature in other languages.
Wikipedia: National Library of Sweden (EN), Website, Heritage Website
74. Royal Mews
The Royal Stables is the name of H.M. The King's Royal Stables building, located in the Kusen block at Väpnargatan 1 and Riddargatan 22, next to the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Östermalm in Stockholm. The building was inaugurated in 1894 by King Oscar II. The Royal Stables are a national monument.
75. Centrumkyrkan
Centrumkyrkan is a church in Farsta in Stockholm Municipality, Sweden. The congregation, which belongs to the Uniting Church of Sweden, works closely with the Church of Sweden in Farsta. The church is a so-called cooperative church between the parish of Centrumkyrkan and the parish of Farsta.
76. Sankta Birgitta Kyrka
Saint Birgitta church is a church building in Nockeby. It belongs to Västerled parish in Stockholm's diocese. The church is located slightly hundreds of meters from Nockebybanan's final station Current Nockeby. Where the church is located, there was previously a turning loop for the trams.
77. Holmiaparken
Holmiaparken is a park on Drottningholmsvägen next to Lindhagensplan in Kristineberg on Kungsholmen in Stockholm. In 2010, the park, which for a long time had no name, was named Holmia Park by Mayor Regina Kevius after the Holmia residential area, which was demolished in the late 1960s.
78. Spånga kyrka
Spånga Church is a church in the Spånga-Tensta borough in Stockholm, Sweden. It is part of Spånga-Kista Parish in the Diocese of Stockholm. The oldest part of the church originates from 1175–1200. Large reconstructions and enhancements took place during the 14th and 15th centuries.
79. Droskan
Droskan is a park located on the corner of Folkungagatan and Södermannagatan on Södermalm in central Stockholm. The park is the continuation of the Droskhästen block and the name of the park connects to the use of the word cab in the sense of "horse-drawn carriage" and later "taxi".
80. Rosenlundsparken
Rosenlundsparken is a park in Södermalm, Stockholm, Sweden. The park, also known as "Skånegläntan", began construction in the 1930s and was not completed until the early 1970s. For the renovation carried out in 2007, the park section "The Beach" was awarded the Siena Prize in 2008.
81. Folkoperan
Folkoperan is an opera house in Stockholm, Sweden, at Hornsgatan 72 in the southern district of Södermalm. It is one of Stockholm's most successful opera houses in terms of audience attendance, and is considered Sweden's most important stage for freelance opera singers and musicians.
82. Berwaldhallen
The Berwald Hall is a concert hall situated in a park landscape at Dag Hammarskjölds väg 3 in the Östermalm district of Stockholm, Sweden. Construction on the building began in 1976 based on a design by architects Erik Ahnborg and Sune Lindström. The hall is shaped as a hexagon.
83. Essinge kyrka
Essinge Church is the parish church of Västermalm parish, it stands on Stora Essingen's second highest point. The church was designed by architect Cyrillus Johansson and inaugurated on Thanksgiving Day in 1959. Since April 1990, the facility has been a church cultural monument.
84. Frälsningsarméns tempel
The Temple is the Salvation Army's first corps (congregation) at Östermalmsgatan 69, in Östermalm in Stockholm. It was built in 1886–1887 as the first union building in Sweden, for Stockholm's 1st corps and is today the oldest union building in the world in continuous use.
85. Humlegården
Humlegården is a major park in the district of Östermalm in Stockholm, Sweden. The park borders on Karlavägen in the north, Sturegatan in the east, Humlegårdsgatan in the south and Engelbrektsgatan in the west. It is the location of the Swedish Royal Library.
86. Bergsgruvan
The mountain mine is located on the southern station area at Södermalm in Stockholm. The mountain mine is partly a mountainous area north of Södra station and partly the name of the park located there. The park borders with its western part to Rosenlundsgatan.
87. Axel Oxenstierna
The statue of Axel Oxenstierna is a statue depicting the Swedish Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna. The statue stands in the courtyard of the House of Nobility facing Riddarfjärden in Stockholm. The statue was created by sculptor John Börjeson and unveiled in 1890.
88. Sjöstadskapellet
Sjöstadskapellet is a chapel belonging to Sofia Parish in the Diocese of Stockholm. The chapel is located at the Sickla quay tram station in Stockholm's Södra Hammarbyhamnen district. On December 4, 2002, the chapel was consecrated by Bishop Caroline Krook.
89. Ellen Keys Park
Ellen Keys Park is a park near Jarlaplan in Östermalm in central Stockholm. The park has an area of 0.5 hectares and stretches between Karlavägen and Birger Jarlsgatan and is bounded to the north by a new residential block and to the south by Borgarskolan.
90. Anna Lindhs Park
Anna Lindh's Park, formerly Vintertullsparken, is a park in Stockholm, Sweden. The park is surrounded by the Hamnvakten block, which was the first new residential block to be built in Hammarbyhamnen, to the south the park faces the quay and Hammarby lake.
91. Fontändamm
Fontändamm is a fountain sculpture at Manhemsgatan in Aspudden, southern Stockholm. The sculpture was created in 1912 by architect Albin Brag and was paid for by the building company Manhem. Brag also designed several residential buildings in the area.
92. Linnémonumentet
The Linnaeus Monument is a group of statues in Humlegården in central Stockholm, depicting Carl Linnaeus. It was made by Frithiof Kjellberg and unveiled in 1885. Around the monument, the Linnaeus plantation was established with 21,000 plants.
93. Lillsjöparken
Lillsjöparken in Bromma in Västerort within the municipality of Stockholm is a park that surrounds Lillsjön. The lake and the park are located where the Riksby, Ulvsunda and Ulvsunda industrial areas meet. The park was established in 1998.
94. Seglora Church
Seglora Church is a wooden church building located at Skansen in Stockholm, Sweden. It was erected in 1729 in Seglora in Västergötland, but was moved to Skansen in 1918, after a new parish church in stone made the older church superfluous.
95. Skyview
Avicii Arena, originally known as Stockholm Globe Arena and previously as Ericsson Globe, but commonly referred to in Swedish simply as Globen, is an indoor arena located in Stockholm Globe City, Johanneshov district of Stockholm, Sweden.
96. Dårarnas båt
The Fools' Boat is a sculpture created by Sture Collin in 1990. The sculpture can be found in three locations around Sweden: the Sockenplan subway station in Stockholm, Hornsgatspuckeln, also in Stockholm, and in Vasaparken in Västerås.
97. Gustav Adolfs kyrka
The Gustaf Adolf Church is a church building in the Gustav Adolf Park at Östermalm in Stockholm, Sweden. Belonging to the Oscar Parish of the Church of Sweden, the church was inaugurated on 6 November 1892 by bishop Gottfrid Billing.
98. Kristi förklarings ortodoxa kyrka
Christ's Explanation Orthodox Church is a church and congregation on Birger Jarlsgatan 98 in the Östermalm district in Stockholm's inner city. The church room, which was erected in 1905-1907, was declared in 1999 for building memory.
Wikipedia: Kristi förklarings ortodoxa kyrka, Stockholm (SV)
99. Birger Jarls kenotaf
Birger Jarl's kenotaf is a sculpture and a shin, a so -called kenotaf, over Birger Jarl at Stockholm City Hall. Birger Jarl's Kenotaf was embodied by the town hall architect Ragnar Östberg together with the sculptor Gustaf Sandberg.
100. Finnish Church
The Finnish Church is a church building in Gamla stan in Stockholm, Sweden. Belonging to the Stockholm Finnish Parish of the Church of Sweden, it was opened in 1725 after the Lilla Bollhuset building had been rebuilt into a church.
Wikipedia: Finnish Church, Stockholm (EN), Website, Heritage Website
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Disclaimer Please be aware of your surroundings and do not enter private property. We are not liable for any damages that occur during the tours.