designer gear to hand-made jewellery and one-off antiques. Strøget, the pedestrianised main street, features an excellent selection of department stores and mainstream, brand-name goods, while the charming and historic Latin Quarter and Frederiksbjerg districts are good for edgier finds like clothes, ceramics and other creations from local artisans and designers - not to mention plenty of welcoming cafés where visitors can relax and catch their breath while contemplating their next purchase.
The atmosphere may be relaxed in Aarhus, but that doesn't mean there's a dearth of things to do. The city is renowned as a centre of art and culture, with plenty of events and happenings over the course of the year to add spice to any city break. A particular highlight of every summer season is the
Aarhus Festival, one of the largest cultural events in the whole of Scandinavia. This week-long extravaganza takes place this year from 26 August - 4 September and will bring world-class opera, ballet, theatre, music and more to the city centre. At other times, the focus falls predominantly on the centrally-located
Concert Hall, while Aarhus also prides itself on being Denmark's 'city of music', having produced a great many musical artists of national repute over the last 30 years.
Another of the city's key cultural attractions is the impressive
ARoS art gallery, which is an architectural gem as well as an important collection of paintings, sculptures and installations of international repute. As part of its continual expansion and improvement, the gallery recently unveiled its crowning glory - a massive new rooftop installation called
'Your Rainbow Panorama' by the Danish-Icelandic artist, Olafur Eliasson. This permanent work takes the form of a circular, 150m-long walkway made of brightly-coloured glass panels and presents a striking and much-lauded addition to the city skyline. Other interesting museums in the city centre include the
Women's Museum, the
Natural History Museum, the Aarhus Urban Museum and the
Steno Museum of science and medicine.
In addition to these cultural treats, Aarhus also offers a range of historical attractions that provide a glimpse of Danish lifestyles in times gone by. Foremost among these is
Den Gamle By ('The Old Town'), a fascinating recreation of a Danish country town circa the Nineteenth Century. Here, old-style stores, gardens and workshops create a unique, living museum where visitors can experience life as it was in the days of the famous Danish author, Hans Christian Andersen.