SIGNS WERE DESTROYING THE TOWN’S APPEARANCE
THE SHOPS AND THEIR SIGNS BACK THEN
CONVERSION INTO PEDESTRIAN STREETS
Traffic in Stjernegade
Sct Olai Gade is resurfaced and converted into a “slow street”
PEOPLE AND TRAFFIC IN ELSINORE
Interview with town planner Jan Gehl
SIGNAGE CHANGES
Stjernegade
Stengade
MORE SOPHISTICATED SIGNS AND FACADES
In the spring of 1971, the booklet “Signs and Facades” was published and was handed out free of charge to shop owners in an attempt to start a dialogue about signage in the town. The goal was to get the shops to “tidy up” their shop fronts and get rid of unnecessary adornments, while at the same time toning down the extreme signage that had been dominating large areas of the town for the past few decades. By talking to shop owners and introducing regulations, signs and facades were successfully modified so they did not undermine the town’s original character to such a large extent, but instead allowed the beautiful old facades to enhance the characters and profiles of the individual shops. Some shops displayed their old guild signs, while others put up old decorative painted signs that had been discovered when the buildings were being renovated.
THE HOUSES BECOME ROOTED
Shop fronts in Elsinore