List of architectural monuments in the Kommuneqarfik Sermersooq

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Municipalities and districts of Greenland

The list of architectural monuments in Kommuneqarfik Sermersooq includes all protected buildings and areas in Kommuneqarfik Sermersooq in Greenland . For explanations see the List of Monuments in Greenland .

Nuuk District

Nuuk

All protected buildings in Nuuk are in the city center. There are no protected buildings in the suburbs.

Note: Some buildings appear in the municipal plan but not in the city atlas, others appear in the city atlas or are protected according to the National Museum, but do not appear in the municipal plan.

Type No. description Construction year date image receipt
Monument protection B-7 This is one of the most important historical buildings in Greenland. It was built by the Moravian Christian David between 1747 and 1748 as a church and home of the missionary and thus represented the center of Ny-Herrnhut . It was financed by Dutch Moravians. It was rebuilt several times and last renovated by Karsten Rønnow from 1984 to 1985 , with the west wing being added. The building has a converted attic. The timber -clad half-timbered main building has a shingle-covered hipped roof , while the side wing is crowned by a gable roof . In the center of the main building there is a roof turret that functions as a bell tower . There are white corner posts on all corners and edges of the house. From the north facade, the building appears symmetrical, as it was before the extension in the 1980s. There are two vestibules here , each with a window. Eight other windows of different sizes are located directly on the north facade. There are three dormers on the north side of the roof. There are also dormers on the sides of the building. On the south side there are two more dormers and an equally rich number of windows. The side wing also has three dormers, but they are higher. At the gable of the side wing there are two windows each on the ground floor and two in the attic. The side wing creates a large, enclosed garden with a flagpole in the middle. On the east side there is a goat barn as an auxiliary building. The historical shape goes back to the typical architectural guidelines of the Moravians, with the rectangular floor plan representing Jerusalem . 1747/48 April 12, 1983 Nuuk-moravian-brethren-herrnhut-huset-nuup-kangerlua.jpg [1]
B-30 The old hospital was built in 1930, replacing the previous building, B-142, and served as such until 1967. In 1974 it was rebuilt and used as a school home. It is still part of the Ilinniarfissuaq campus today . The timber-clad timber-framed building designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller is seven windows long, with a white wooden pilaster built between each window . It stands on a high, white-painted plinth in which the basement is almost at ground level. The building also has an extended attic. In the middle of the gable roof, which is covered with wooden shingles, there is a large triangular dormer window , next to which two smaller flat roof dormers sit to the right and left . A flagpole is mounted on the large dormer. There are small additions to the two gable ends, with the east serving as a vestibule , while the west was previously used as a morgue. There are a number of windows in both extensions. At the rear of the building there is another specially covered entrance area. In the roof area there is a tiled chimney and six ventilation systems made of zinc as well as five additional dormer windows and six horizontal roof windows, all without any order. 1930 September 30, 1983 [2]
B-36 The building originally served as a cooperage and material store, then as a bakery and finally as a painting workshop, while today it is used by the museum as a workshop. After its construction in 1852, the building was widened significantly, as the roof structure still shows today. On the north side there are three barn door-like doors. The entrance door is on the south side in the extension area. The building stands on a white stone plinth and is itself built of stone, but was later covered with Swedish red wooden boards. The windows are white. The gable roof of the main building is covered with shingles. On the north side there is a brick chimney. Nuuk's first church buildings were on the site and it is possible that the building material came from them. 1852 [3]
B-37 The building is the oldest house in Greenland still in existence. After Hans Egede moved his mission station from Håbets Ø to today's Nuuk in 1728 , he built his house here. The simply built house has a developed attic and a shingled gable roof. The building is basically made of stone that has been painted yellow. The side windows are white. There are three triangular dormers on the south side, another on the north side, where there are also two modern skylights. The roof gables of the building are clad with red wooden boards, while the house edges are green. On the east gable and on the north side there are two more recent additions which, together with buildings B-53 and B-75, form a small courtyard. There is a large garden in front of the house, which is framed by a green fence. The building was expanded during a visit by Thorvald Stauning . The roof windows on the south side were added, as was a terrace that was later converted into a winter garden. 1728 [4]
B-43 The building was built as a provisions store and shop. It was the only goods store in town until 1947 and now serves as the museum's guest apartment. The top floor is covered by a shingled gable roof with a single triangular dormer and a brick chimney. There is a vestibule on the north side. The building was later extended to the south. The half-timbered building, placed on a white stone plinth, is covered with Swedish red wooden boards. The white windows are modern. 1850 [5]
B-68 The building was designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller in 1937 to serve as a boardroom for Sydgrønlands Landsråd . After the introduction of the Hjemmestyre , it served as a shop and provost's office. Today it houses the Icelandic consulate. The rather small, timber-clad half-timbered building standing on a black concrete base is one-story with an attic and a shingled pitched roof with a brick chimney. On the west side there is an additional small gable, which is additionally highlighted by white pilaster strips , between which there is a ribbon of windows . The front door is on the left. The windows on the west, east and south sides are all Dannebrogsvinduer , so divided in the aspect ratio of the flag of Denmark , whereby they are arranged as ribbon windows on the east as well as in the west. There are smaller windows on the north side. The corners of the house are provided with corner pilaster strips. All edges of the house and the windows are white and the entrance door is dark green, while the rest of the building is typically Swedish red. 1937 [6]
B-74 The red stone house stands on a black stone plinth. The gables are clad with wooden boards. The entrance door is on the east side. There is a white ribbon of windows next to it. At the north gable there is a green door to the attic, which is lined with two small white square windows on top. The building was erected around 1887 and initially served as a petroleum store . In 1922 it was extended. In 1949 it was converted into a cooperage and used as such until 1969. Today it serves as a museum building. around 1887 [7]
B-78 When salmon began to be caught in Kangerluarsussuaq (Grædefjorden), the canning house was built in Nuuk to preserve the salmon. The building, presumably built by Peter Anton Cortsen , stands on a concrete base and is covered with vertical wooden boards. On the west side there is the entrance door and a small double window. On the east side there is a similar window and a larger window. At the north gable there is a barn door and a gate to the attic, a roof winch and two small windows in the attic. Two more small attic windows sit on the south gable. On the gables there is also a wooden beam between the ground floor and the attic. The building is yellow with green doors and white windows and door frames. The gable roof is covered with shingles. The windows were replaced during a renovation in the mid-1980s. It served temporarily as a warehouse, which is why it is called Sømskuret ( German  nail shed ), and is now the workshop of the kayak club. 1914 [8th]
B-137
The main church in Nuuk is also the most important church in the country. It was built in 1849. Karen Ørsted, a Danish woman who had never set foot in Greenland but who is said to have had an affair with Poul Egede , ordered in 1775 that a church should be built here from her estate. The architect of the building is Laurits Albert Winstrup . There was initially an onion dome on the roof , which was replaced in 1884 by a pyramid roof made of copper. In 1913 the wood paneling was added and in 1930 today's roof shingles were attached to the gable roof. When the Diocese of Greenland was created in 1993 , the church became the cathedral . It stands on a stone pedestal and is a half-timbered building that was filled with soapstone . The younger wooden paneling replaces the initial plastering and consists of Swedish red horizontal wooden boards. The door, window and building edges are white. The entrance is on the south gable and consists of a portal on stilts . The door area has two small four-part windows. The steeple is just above the entrance and has a small window and a steeple clock on each side. There are four large and two small windows on each of the long sides. The north gable is rather untypical for a church building. Here is a door with a window on the right. In the attic there is a roof winch over an attic door, from which there are two further windows on the right and left. To the north of the church is the historic Nuuks cemetery.
1849 Annaassisitta-Oqaluffia-old-nuuk.jpg [9]
B-138 The chapel of the church is a small structure with a shingled gable roof. There is a large, round double-winged door on the east gable. On the other side is a small window at the top of the pediment triangle. An ornamental cross is attached to the gable triangle on both gables. The door and windows are white like the corner pilasters of the building, which is otherwise a half-timbered building clad with vertical wooden planks in Sweden. 1913 [10]
B-142 The building was built in 1903 as the second hospital. The architect was Peter Anton Cortsen . In 1930 Johan Lehmann Weber converted it into a residential building. First it was inhabited by teachers from the seminary , then by the rector. Today it is empty. Archival material shows that the building was originally shorter and was therefore later enlarged. The building stands on a white stone base and is a one-story half-timbered building with a loft. The gable ends each have two or three windows on the ground floor and three on the top floor. On the northeast side, the right window is missing in favor of a door. The northwest facade has a central porch with a monopitch roof with a door on the right side, two small windows on the long side and a small round window on each of the two gable ends. The facade of the main building has one window each to the right and left of the porch and two small triangular dormer windows in the roof. On the southwest side there are four ground floor windows and a large hipped dormer window with a ridge. The facade is clad with red vertical wooden boards, the windows are white and the frames and building edges are light brown. The color scheme is similar to that of the seminar, but the frame color is less strong and darker. The gable roof, on the northwest side of which there is a brick chimney, is covered with roof shingles. 1903 [11]
B-144 The building is the distinctive main building of Grønland's seminarium . It is one of the most striking buildings in the city and is depicted on the coat of arms of the former Nuuk Municipality . The seminar building was built in 1906 by the architect Carl C. Hansen and thus replaced the building with the provost's apartment by the church from its inauguration on September 18, 1907. From the 1950s the top floor was used as a girls' dormitory, as women were also allowed to study in 1951. The building stands on a white concrete base. The half-timbered building is very long with thirteen windows for the time. Seven of the windows are located in the center of the building, while three more sit on either side in two only marginally protruding gables, which can be viewed structurally as side wings. As a result, the building plays with three-dimensionality. The roof has four sloping skylights and three gable dormers that alternate. In the gables there are two large windows and two more small ones above. There are no windows on the sides of the building, which are formed by the long sides of the side wings. The north facade is similar to the south facade, but there are only two sloping skylights and two gable dormers. In addition, on the right - ergo western - side there is a connecting corridor to the two younger wings B-1505 and B-1506 (which are therefore considered to be separate buildings). The building has no door and can only be reached via the connecting passage from the other houses. The building is richly decorated and is attributed to the national romantic and historical architectural style based on medieval castles . There is an ornamental frame on each window. A detailed decorative strip is attached between the ground floor and the attic as well as between the attic and the attic. The roof ridge of the shingled gable roof is provided with a red wooden strip, at the ends of which there is a krullgalion and which is crowned in the middle by a weathercock . The building defines the Nuuks seminar colors with a red facade, white windows, golden frames and edges and a gray roof. 1906 Grønlands Seminarium Nuuk.jpg [12]
B-1401 The gymnasium of the seminar was built in 1907. The building owner is Carl C. Hansen . In 1968 it was moved to its current position and restored in 1988. The building, which stands on a concrete plinth, has a gable roof and looks very much like the main seminar building. There is one rounded and two small windows on each of the gables, with the large window on the east side being slightly shorter towards the bottom. There are six windows on each of the two long sides. The door is housed in an open vestibule on the south side. Opposite the door, a window is missing on the other side of the building. On the north side on the right there was probably a door in the past, as you can still see today. The building is Swedish red and has the same golden ornaments as the seminary. The windows are white and the roof is also covered with gray shingles. It has the same ornamentation as on the main building. The door is dark green. The building has meanwhile also served as a boardroom for Grønlands Landsråd, as well as a cultural center, assembly building or cinema. 1907 April 12, 1983 [13]
worth preserving B-2 The building was erected during the US control of Greenland in World War II in 1941. It served as the US consulate in Greenland until 1953. It was then used as an official residence and today serves as an office building for the State Medical Office. The building may have been designed by Pavia Høegh . The foundation is made of white-painted concrete. The outer walls are half-timbered constructions that are clad with horizontal wooden boards painted brown. The windows and the rest of the building are also painted white. The single-storey building with a loft consists of numerous corners and rectangular building sections built into one another. These individual parts of the building have gable roofs covered with shingles . On the west side there are two dormers embedded in the roof . The entrance area cuts into the main building. In front of it there is a terrace, which is framed by a picket fence . 1941 memorable [14]
B-4 The building was constructed as a type house 491 according to plans by Jørgen Maglebye . The single-storey house has a loft and a cellar. It has a side wing that joins the main wing in a north-south direction. The entrance area is covered. There is a dormer and a zinc chimney on the gable roof covered with roofing felt. On the south side there is also a specially roofed bay window with a large garden in front of it. The windows are divided into four by white frames. The building is made of wood and stands on a concrete base. The outer facade is made of natural white wooden boards. 1949/50 - [15]
B-10 The building is the apartment as well as the office and archive of the inspector and thus the residential building of one of the two highest officials in the country at that time. It later served as a residence for the imperial ombudsman, today's representative head of state in Greenland. When it was built by master carpenter Westergaard in 1831, the storey building had seven windows on each side, while in 1926 it was expanded to ten using a half-timbered construction. The whole building is covered with light blue vertical wooden planks. A shingle-covered gable roof towers over the top floor, on which two brick chimneys stand on zinc bases. The six skylights were also added later. On the north side there are two small extensions as well as several skylights without any order, under which the building side suffers architecturally. At the west gable there is a vestibule with its own gable roof and two side windows. On the east side there are two windows on the ground floor on the right side and a large one on the top floor, which is framed by three small windows on the left, right and above. All windows are made of white painted wood. To the north is a goat barn as an outbuilding made of white-painted stone and light blue wooden boards. 1831 - [16]
B-12 Like B-4, the building is constructed as a type house 491 and thus architecturally corresponds to this. This house is painted blue. 1949/50 - [17]
B-28 This house is also a type 491. This one is green. 1949/50 - [18]
B-29 The building, which was designed as the home of the sales assistant , was originally built in 1906 as a half-timbered building by Peter Anton Cortsen and was taken over by the doctor before the building was finished. The main building is five windows long. There is a terrace on the west side. On the north side there is a large extension that consists of a separate building that is connected by a corridor. The outer facade is formed by a yellow plank cladding, which is the usual color for Greenland hospital buildings. Numerous dark green framed windows with white window frames penetrate the facade. The roof structure consists of several shingle-covered gable roofs on the individual parts of the building. There is a zinc chimney on the main roof. The roof ridge is crowned by an ornamental strip. The building was apparently in such a bad state of preservation that it was demolished and rebuilt in 2011 with a slightly different structure. 1906/2011 -
B-31 The building is intended to represent the former Canadian consulate built in 1941. In fact, archive footage shows that the consulate was across the street and no longer exists today. Photos show both buildings having existed in parallel. The protection status of the building is therefore not considered to be justified. 1941 - [19]
B-32 The building was constructed from the material of the old inspector's apartment from 1782. The multi-storey building is clad with yellow-orange wooden boards. The window frames and door are dark green, while the frames are dark red. There are two extensions to the building. The large extension with a flat roof on the east gable is more recent and replaces an earlier, equally large extension with an architecturally remarkable roof construction made of a flat hipped roof with an attached pent roof . The main building has a typical clapboard gable roof. The renovation in the 1970s significantly changed the building from its original shape. 1833 memorable [20]
B-34 The building called Henning Meyers Hus or Tændstikæske ( German for  matchbox ) is almost square, but has a complex roof structure. This shows that it was originally a smaller rectangular house with a gable roof, to which a side wing with a transverse gable roof with triangular dormers was later added in the same width. There is a small outbuilding to the south. Around the house there is a large garden framed by a dark green fence. The building was designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller and is a half-timbered building on a concrete base. The outer facade consists of yellow-orange vertical wooden boards. The windows are just as green as the fence and door, while the frames around them are dark red. The building has been rebuilt, expanded and renovated several times. 1925 memorable [21]
B-48 The half-timbered building standing on a concrete base is covered with Swedish red wooden boards. The building consists of two wings. The many white windows are striking. On the north side there are five major shop window through which five large shed dormer windows sit. There are two doors on the east gable, one on the ground floor and one on the top floor, which can be reached via an external staircase and is lined with two windows on the right and left. Four larger and one small window above are on the west gable. There is an old winch on both gables. A vestibule with an entrance door is built on the south side. There are also five windows here. On the south wing there are five or six ground floor windows and two dormer windows on each side, with another door on the west facade instead of a window. The south gable is constructed in the same way as the east gable, but there is another window on the left on the ground floor. The gable roof is covered with roofing felt and has several ventilation channels made of zinc. The building replaced the old B-43 shop. It was built in 1947 according to plans by the architect Olav Himmelstrup . The south wing was added four years later. During a later renovation, the entrance door was moved and the dormer windows were installed. 1947 - [22]
B-53 It is an outbuilding of B-37. The small goat barn was probably later extended to the south, as the roof structure shows. There are three large windows on the south side. On the west side there is a small extension with another small window. The high base of the slope is made of natural stone, as is the red-painted north wall, while the rest of the building is made of yellow wooden boards. 1894 - [23]
B-58 The small building called Tømrerkroen ( German  carpenter's inn ) is four windows wide and has a small annex on the north side where the entrance is. It stands on a concrete base and is covered with Swedish red wooden boards. The gable roof is covered with shingles and has a brick chimney. The subdivision of the floors can be seen from the outside through a bar between the ground floor and the attic. There is also another eye-catching beam with no known function above the attic window. The door and window were later replaced. Originally it served as accommodation for craftsmen, was later used as a state residence and today serves as an interim church building during the renovation of Hans Egedes Kirke. 1926 - [24]
B-66 It is the first reinforced concrete building in Greenland . The large building has four small windows on the north side next to four barn doors, above which four dwelling houses with four other barn doors extend into the high pitched roof that covers two attic floors. On the other sides there are more windows, doors and barn doors. There is a roof winch on the west gable. On the south side there is a modern extension consisting of several adjoining but staggered individual buildings. The building was originally twelve meters shorter to the east before it was extended in 1949. The building, designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller , initially served as a coal store and was rebuilt in the early 1980s, with the ground floor being covered with white horizontal wooden boards, but the upper floor with red vertical wooden boards. The doors are just as red as the first floor windows, while the attic windows are white. There are two white wooden stairs to the top floor on both gable ends. Today the building houses the Greenland National Museum . 1936 memorable [25]
B-70 The building was previously built as a brewery and forge, later served as a bakery and is now used as a museum warehouse. It stands on a white stone base and is a half-timbered building that is covered with yellow wooden boards. The pointed gable roof is covered with roofing felt. It has a door on the ground floor and one in the attic on the north gable, while there is a barn door on the south gable. The first floor door was obviously also a gate in the past, as the hinges still present show. There are two white windows next to it. Two more white windows are on the west side while the rest of the building is windowless. around 1848 memorable [26]
B-75 The building was erected in 1892 as a carpentry and bakery. It later served as a colonial office and post office. In 1975 it was converted into a pastor's apartment, but today it is out of use and decaying. The half-timbered building stands on a white stone plinth and is clad with vertical wooden boards in Sweden red. On the west gable there are two windows each on the first floor and two on the top floor. Archive material shows that there used to be two barn doors and a clock here. The building is four windows long. On the north side, a window will be replaced by the entrance door. At the east gable there is a small extension with two doors on the north side and a high chimney. All windows and doors are white. The gable roof of the building is covered with roofing felt and has a modern skylight on the south side. 1892 memorable [27]
B-81 The black warehouse stands on a concrete base, is clad with black wooden boards and has a gray gable roof with shingles. The doors are also black, but the door frames and very unevenly spaced windows are white. Overall, the building is comparatively large. On the roof is written in yellow on black C11 , which served as a navigation aid for Allied aircraft during World War II . 1927 memorable [28]
B-88 It is a type house from Grønlands Tekniske Organization , probably a modified form of Type 490, drawn by Erik Rasmussen. The building consists of a main building with a gable roof, on the north-eastern side of which there is an extension with a sloping roof that extends over the north-western gable. The building stands on a concrete base and is a half-timbered structure clad with black wooden boards. The windows are white and have shutters . The roof is covered with roofing felt and there is a brick chimney on the extension. around 1960 - [29]
B-131 The building designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller is part of Grønland's seminarium . The building called Miki serves as a school home. The building stands on a white concrete base and is a half-timbered building with board cladding. A small vestibule is built on a pile construction, to which a wooden staircase leads. This was added later. There are three large windows on the southeast side. The gable edges are provided with wooden strips. On the gable ends, the wooden cladding in the attic protrudes further than below. On the northwest side is another small extension with a monopitch roof and another door. The building's gable roof is covered with shingles. The building is kept in the typical seminar colors with a red facade, golden frame and dark gray roof. Overall, the building is very shabby. 1931 memorable [30]
B-132 The Títo school home , also designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller , used to offer space for 20 seminar students . The symmetrical building is five window widths long and has an annex with windows on both gable sides, of which the northern one serves as a vestibule. Both long sides of the house have five large windows, all of which are tenths. The gable roof is covered with roofing felt. Since the building stands on an embankment, it has an exceptionally high white concrete base. It is also held in the typical seminar colors and has a red facade and golden frames around the white windows and the door. 1933 - [31]
B-136 The building erected by Helge Bojsen-Møller used to serve as a room for Sløjdunterricht, the Scandinavian form of work . It stands on a high black concrete base and is a half-timbered building. The facade is clad with white wooden planks, while the frames are blue. A vestibule is built on the north side, the entrance area of ​​which is specially covered. There is another small extension on the east side. The gable roof is covered with roofing felt. It was built in 1938 and remodeled in the 1980s. 1938 - [32]
B-140 The building was erected in 1847 by the carpenter Christian Gottfried Lendorf (the father of the architect Carl Lendorf ) in order to furnish the seminarium which had been newly founded two years earlier . The multi-storey building stands on a brick base that has been painted white. The facade is clad with Swedish red horizontal wooden boards. All windows and doors as well as the building edges are white. The gable roof is covered with shingles. It is two-story and also has a converted attic. The building was rebuilt several times, especially in 1973. The entrance door is centrally located on the south facade. The associated vestibule was demolished in 1973. To the right and left of the door there are two windows each and five on the upper floor. At the west gable there are only two windows in the attic. The windows on the north side are unevenly distributed and have different distances. There are four upstairs, while the right window on the ground floor is missing a door in favor of it. The east gable also has two windows in the attic and an additional large window on the right on the upper floor. The seminarium was located on the ground floor, while the provost, who directed the seminarium, lived on the upper floor. The top floor served as an archive and warehouse. Later the building also served as the vice bishop's apartment and as an office building. 1847 memorable [33]
B-141 The single-family house is a clad half-timbered building on a gray concrete base. The main building has a gable roof. On the west gable there are two windows each on the ground floor and two attic floors as well as an extension with a hipped roof and a window to the west. The north side has two larger windows, a smaller one and the front door. On the east gable there are two attic windows and a further extension with its own saddle roof, one window per long side, gable window and another entrance door. On the south side there are three windows and two more in a dormer window in the attic. The building is in the seminar colors with a red wooden facade, golden frames, white windows and doors and a dark gray roof, but the building has nothing to do with the seminar complex. Augo Lynge grew up in the house . 1903 memorable [34]
B-145 It is another type house 491, which is kept in Swedish red. 1949/50 - [35]
B-146 The teacher's / principal's apartment designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller stands on a white concrete base and also served as an office. It is a clad half-timbered building. The one-story building has a loft and a cellar. There is a dwelling on the south facade . On the ground floor there are two windows to the right and left and a double window in the middle as well as a window in the mid-house. The west gable has two ground floor windows and a window in the attic. An edge in the cladding shows the transition from the ground floor to the attic. There is a vestibule with two small windows on the north facade. Another door is on the left. To the right and left of the porch there are a total of three windows. There are two small, irregularly distributed triangular dormers in the roof. On the east gable there are two windows each on the first floor and two on the top floor. The building's gable roof is covered with wooden shingles and has ridge ornaments on both ends. The building cladding is Swedish red, the windows white, the frames and edges yellow-orange and the roof dark gray. The color of the building therefore resembles the seminar building. 1922/23 or 1930 memorable [36]
B-148 The building called Økonomien stands out architecturally. Like the other buildings in the seminar complex , it was designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller . On the ground floor there was a dining room for a good 50 students as well as a kitchen and a laundry room. The top floor served as the apartment of the kitchen manager and the kitchen assistants. There is a cold room in the basement, which can be reached from the washroom via a floor hatch. In 1960 the building was taken out of service as a dining room. The building is a one-story half-timbered building with a half- hip roof . On the south facade there are two windows on each side and a large gable in the center with four windows on the ground floor, two on the top floor and three small windows around them. The gable with its clear floor delimitation resembles the architecture of the main building. The eastern gable has a porch with three windows and two attic windows. On the north side there are four windows on each side of another vestibule with its own saddle roof, which itself has another window on the right and left. There are two small triangular dormers in the roof. The west gable has a small bay window with two windows. Above that there are two more windows in the attic. The building stands on a white plinth and is clad in strong red wooden planks, in contrast to the Swedish red of the other buildings. The frames and edges of the building are gold, the windows are white, and the roof is covered with gray felt. The coloring largely corresponds to the seminar colors, although the building stands out because of its red color. 1928 memorable [37]
B-149 The building was built as an editor's apartment, presumably by Helge Bojsen-Møller . It stands on a dark green concrete base. The building is on a slope, so the base is very high on one side. The main building has a half-hip roof. On the south side there is a dwarf house with a hipped roof, which ends at the same height as the cripple hip of the main roof. On the west side there is a large extension with a hipped roof. There are further additions to the north. The windows and doors are also dark green, while the facade is made of white wooden boards. The roof is covered with shingles. 1945 - [38]
B-151 The Eskimoslottet ( German  Eskimo Castle ) was built in 1919 according to plans by Helge Bojsen-Møller and moved to its current position in 1931/32 and expanded in the process. The building has an annex on the east side and one on the north side. The south side has four windows on the ground floor and two large hipped dormers in the gable roof. On the west gable there are two ground floor windows, two attic windows and a small window in the top of the gable. On the north facade of the main building there is only a small window on the left and two sloping skylights above. The extension has two windows on the west side, five small ground floor windows in the north gable and a larger attic window. The east gable of the main building is largely taken up by the extension. To the right and above it are two small windows. The extension itself has the entrance door on the east gable, surrounded by two small windows and a triangular gable window. There is another small window on the south side of the extension. The building stands on a white plinth, is a half-timbered building with Swedish red wood paneling, white windows, gold frames and a gray shingle roof and thus corresponds to the seminar colors. It was built as a school building. In 1958 it was taken over by the seminarium and served as a school home, the nickname of the building resulting from the temperatures prevailing in it at the time. 1919 memorable [39]
B-156 The building is simple and has a gable roof. It is eight windows long, with a glass door installed on the west side instead of a third window. In the roof there are three gable dormers that were added later . On the south gable there is a ground floor and two attic windows. On the south side there are two small vestibules, three small windows, a total of three doors and three sloping roof windows. There are two attic windows on the north gable. The half-timbered building stands on a concrete base and is clad with red wooden boards. The windows are white and the roof is covered with gray roofing felt. 1938 - [40]
B-184 It is another yellow type house 491. 1949/50 - [41]
B-203 The building is a GTO type house, which is a modified version of the Thermo and Type 514 types. The building stands on a concrete base and is a simple half-timbered building with a loft, crawl space and saddle roof. On the north-east side there is a small extension with a sloping roof and on the south-west side there is a winter garden , which is partly clad with wood. The south-east gable has six windows of different sizes. Next to the front door on the northeast side there are two windows, while there is only one in the comparable houses of this type. The northwest facade has three ground floor windows and an attic hatch. There are two more windows next to the winter garden on the southwest side. The building is clad with petrol colored wooden planks, while the windows and building edges are white. The roof is covered with roofing felt. Overall, the building looks run down. 1951 - [42]
B-204 It is a GTO type house of the same type as B-203. This is red in Sweden and in better condition. 1951 - [43]
B-205 The building is another GTO type house of the same type. This is brown. 1951 - [44]
B-206 This type house is yellow. In a recent renovation, the conservatory was removed, at least temporarily. It is uncertain whether it is still there. 1951 - [45]
B-207 It is a gray-blue type house. 1951 - [46]
B-208 This type house is similar in color to B-204. However, instead of the winter garden, there is a greenhouse on the northwest side and replaces two windows. The two windows on the southwest side are therefore slightly shifted compared to the other buildings. 1951 - [47]
B-209 This type house is gray-blue. However, the lower small window of the southeast facade is missing here. 1951 - [48]
B-211 It is another GTO type house. It is also a modified version of the Thermo type, but differs in a few ways from the buildings across the street. On the north-west gable there are two ground floor windows and a cellar window. An open vestibule is built on the northeast side. To the right and left of it are two windows. The southeast facade has two more ground floor windows. The attached greenhouse was recently removed. Instead, there is a door and a double window on this side. On the northeast facade, the roof is lower, like the extension on the other type houses. The building is otherwise the same as the other type houses. The wooden facade is gray. 1951 - [49]
B-213 The building is of the same type as B-211. The differences are the two small attic windows on the north-west and south-east side, and the total of four windows on the north-east side. Here the greenhouse is still preserved. The building is clad with moss green wooden boards. 1951 - [50]
B-214 The building is of the same type as the previous two. It also has attic windows on the north-west side like B-213, but not on the south-east gable. On the northeast side, the window distribution is similar to that of B-211. The building is blue. 1951 - [51]
B-215 This type house most closely resembles the B-211. The basement window is larger due to the higher plinth. There is a fenced terrace next to the greenhouse. The color of the building most closely resembles a dark turquoise or sea green . 1951 - [52]
B-216 The type house is also different from the previous ones. On the north-west gable there is a third small window as well as a small attic window and a larger cellar window. The southeast side has the usual two ground floor windows as well as a small skylight like on the opposite side. On the right of the greenhouse there is a fenced terrace and on the left another cellar window. The building is clad in red. 1951 - [53]
B-217 The Typhaus has the same window layout as B-211. Next to the greenhouse there is a fenced terrace and garden. The building is clad with wooden boards in a very light gray. 1951 - [54]
B-218 This type house, unlike the others, has a larger cellar window and two small attic windows on both gables. There is also another double window to the left of the greenhouse. The building is red. 1951 - [55]
B-219 The type house has two basement windows on the gable side. The building was recently renovated. The attic windows were obviously removed. Before the renovation, the building was dark green. 1951 - [56]
B-220 The building is again a type house across the street (like B-204 to B-209). It is clad in moss green. 1951 - [57]
B-221 The Typhaus is an unmodified type 514. The front gable is the same as the modified version, but there is no extension next to the door. There are two windows to the left of the door, while there are three on the southeast side. The winter garden is located on the northeast gable. Another window is to the left. The building is clad in red. 1951 - [58]
B-222 The building is also a type house 514 and has a sea green color. 1951 - [59]
B-245 The building is a one-story wooden house with a pitched roof and a loft. The south facade is dominated by a dwelling . On the ground floor there are seven windows and a porch with an eighth front window and the entrance door on the side. The dwarf house has three attic windows. To the left and right of the dwelling there are two or one gable dormers . There is an attic door on the west gable, which can be reached via a ramp. On the north facade there are three windows of different sizes, five gable dormers and an extension with a pent roof , window and door. The east gable has two ground floor windows and an attic window. The building looks very asymmetrical on its front facade and it can be assumed that it was enlarged later. The dormers were also added later. The roof is covered with wooden shingles while the facade is white. The windows are red and the frames and building edges are dark green. The building was erected around 1895 and was the South Greenland printing house in which the Atuagagdliutit was printed. The building later served as a boardroom for Syd grønlands Landsråd . Today it is a leisure home. around 1895 - [60]
B-248 The building stands on a concrete base. It is one-story with a loft under the shingled pitched roof. The entrance door and four windows of different sizes are located on the northeast facade. The south-east gable has two ground floor windows and an attic window. The southwest side has three windows and a glass door that leads to the terrace. On the north-west side there is a small extension and two windows each on the ground floor and the attic. The building is clad with vertical, red wooden planks. All windows and doors as well as the corner pilaster strips are white. There is a brick chimney on the roof. The building was constructed from the materials of an earlier building and served as the home of the trade assistant. around 1928 - [61]
B-292 The building is a single-family home with a striking architecture. The main part of the building is a small structure with a gable roof. On the south side, however, there is a dwelling with its own gable roof, which is not located in the center of the roof, but forms the eastern end of the building. On the west side there is an extension with a two-part roof structure, which forms a side wing, as it extends far beyond the width of the building. On the east side there is another extension with an asymmetrical gable roof, which is almost as large as the main building itself, but has no attic. The main building has a flat dormer window on the north side . The building stands on a concrete base. The cladding is white like the windows. The roof is covered with roofing felt. 1933 - [62]
B-398 ???? - [63]
B-514 ???? - Estate al circolo polar - panoramio.jpg [64]
B-515 ???? - [65]
B-615 The house is isolated in the middle of Aqqaluks Plads. There are three large windows on the south facade and another in the mid-house. Instead of the three large windows there used to be six smaller ones. The west gable has an attic window. On the north side there is a porch with a gable roof and windows on both sides and above the door. There is another window to the left of the vestibule. At the east gable there is one window each on the ground floor and one on the top floor. The building is clad in Swedish red, has white windows and corner pilaster strips . 1920 memorable
B-804 The single-family house is a one-storey wooden building on a concrete base with a loft. However, the eastern part of the building is two-story. On the north side, the roof extends significantly further down over a side wing. There is a vestibule on the west side. Overall, no architectural concept can be seen in the building, similar to B-292. It is clad with red wooden planks and has white windows and corner pilasters. 1943 - [66]
B-812 The building is one-story with a loft and crawl space in a high concrete base. There is an extension on the west gable, as well as on the south facade, where there is also a gable dormer . The gable roof of the building is covered with roofing felt. The facade is painted dark blue and the base is white. 1941 - [67]
B-821 The house has been rebuilt and expanded numerous times. Originally it was two windows wide. Today there are three large windows on the southwest facade. Two large dormers are built into the roof above . On the north-west gable there is a small glazed bay window and an attic window. The northeast side has a narrow extension over three quarters of the length of the building. There are four windows and the entrance door. There is another dormer on this side of the roof. There is a small extension with a window on the south-eastern gable. The main building has a ground floor and an attic window on this side. There is an attached shed at the eastern corner of the building. The base of the building is painted black. The facade is covered with white wooden boards. The windows are also white, while the frames and building edges are red. The gable roof is covered with roofing felt. 1946 -
B-837 The house stands on a black concrete base. On the north side there is a large extension and a smaller one on the east gable. On the south facade there are three ground floor windows and above them a dormer window with two windows. The west gable has two ground floor windows and an attic window. The extension on the north side has a small window to the east and a small gable window. The building is clad with blue-gray wooden boards. The windows and building edges are white. The hipped roof is covered with roofing felt. 1930 - [68]
B-841 This house is built simply. It stands on a black concrete base and has a large dormer window with two windows on each side of the gable roof. The building is four windows wide. On the east side there is a vestibule with a whale-like roof. The facade is made of yellow wooden boards. The windows and building edges are white. The roof is untypically covered with roof tiles. 1930 - [69]
B-843 The building was the home of Niels Lynge . It is a smaller house with a gable roof that stands on a black concrete base. At the west gable there is a large vestibule that fills the full width of the building, but is offset a little to the left and so protrudes over the corner of the building. There are two windows and three doors in the porch. It also has an eye-catching roof construction with a gable roof that is flatter on the sides than in the middle. There is also an attic window on the west gable. The two sides of the building each have two large windows. The building cladding is white. The windows and building edges are red. The gable roof is covered with roofing felt and has a central brick chimney. Among other things, Niels Lynge was a painter and the interior walls are painted with his works. The building now serves as part of the Nuuk Art Museum . 1951 - [70]
B-978 The one-story house has a converted attic. The main building has a half- hip roof that is covered with tiles, which is unusual for Greenland. On the north side there is a large extension with a pent roof . On the south side there is a dwelling built into the roof. The concrete base is white, the facade is clad with dark brown wooden boards and the windows and building edges are also white. 1920 - [71]
B-1859 The building is a large warehouse. It is one story and has a high clapboard gable roof, under which there is a converted attic and an attic. The ground floor is made of stone, while the top floors are clad with Swedish red wooden boards. In the roof there are two gable dormers on both sides with attic windows and three small triangular dormers at the level of the attic. There is a window on the east side. On the west side there are two narrow gates with skylights. The north gable has a barn door and a window on the left. In the attic there is a door that can be reached via a staircase and two windows. Another window is in the attic. The south gable is almost identical, but instead of the attic window there is an attic hatch. The building was designed by either Helge Bojsen-Møller or the carpenter Peter Wedsted. The stonemasons Carl and Hjalmar Andersen were involved in the construction. It was originally used as a storage room for dried fish . At the end of the 1970s it was rebuilt by Karsten Rønnow and has served as a museum building since 1977. In the meantime it has also been used by the State Archives. 1929 memorable Train oil manufacturing display Nuuk Greenland.jpg [72]
B-1860 The building stands next to and is similar to the previous one. It was built by Helge Bojsen-Møller . The storage building stands on a concrete base. The west facade has three windows and two barn doors as well as three triangular dormers to the attic and two to the attic. On the east side there are five windows, a door, three triangular dormer windows in the attic and a loft triangular dormer window. The south gable has two ground floor windows, two attic windows, a gate in the attic that can be reached via a winch and two windows at the height of the attic. The opposite side is almost identical, but the left ground floor window is missing here, in the place of which there is a staircase to the top floor gate. The facade is completely clad with vertical red wooden boards. The roof is shingled. The building was also used as a fish warehouse, restored in 1980 and now also serves as a museum building. 1860 memorable [73]
B-2370 The one-story house has two wings and a loft and a cellar in a high concrete base. The side wing is slightly lower than the main part of the building. It has a small window on the long side and an additional attic window above the entrance door. There is a ground floor window on the north facade of the main part. The east gable has only one attic window. On the south side there are three windows and a door that leads to a high terrace. At the west gable there is a ground floor and a attic window. Basement windows wrap around the entire building. The gable roof is covered with shingles and has a central brick chimney. The base is gray, the facade is typically Swedish red with white windows and edges. The building was rebuilt in 1987 on the basis of the previous building. 1987 - [74]
area particularly worthy of preservation 1C12 The area includes mostly modern large buildings in the city center, but also the historic consulates. - - [75]
1C14 The area forms the oldest part of the city. Mainly the old trading buildings from the colonial times and the houses of the trading employees are located here. Many of the buildings are now used by the museum. - - Greenland National Museum.jpg [76]
1D2 The area includes only a few buildings. These are above all the striking old hospital and the church buildings of the colony. The area is also home to Aqqaluks Plads and the mountain with the statue of Hans Egede . - - Nuuk (2013) .jpg [77]
1D3
The area forms the former mission station Neu-Herrnhut of the Moravian Brethren . There used to be a few peat wall houses there, but today the mission building is the only historic building in the area. There is also the historical cemetery. There is only one other building in the area, namely the biologist station of the nature institute.
- - Det gamle universitet i Nuuk 2009.JPG [78]
area worth preserving 1A2 It is a residential area along the Niels Hammekenip Aqqutaa. - - [79]
1A6 Part of the area is worthy of preservation. The affected residential area consists of GTO type houses from the 1950s and 1960s that have been laid out very neatly. - - [80]
1A7 The area forms the residential area on Inspektørbakken with self-built houses. - - [81]

Capillary

Type No. description Construction year date image receipt
worth preserving B-108 ???? - [82]
B-109 ???? - [83]
B-269 ???? - [84]

Qeqertarsuatsiaat

Type No. description Construction year date image receipt
Monument protection B-93 The building is now in ruins. 1763 April 12, 1983 [85]
worth preserving B-91 ???? - [86]
B-154 ???? - [87]
B-155 ???? - [88]
B-157 ???? - [89]
B-1126 ???? - [90]

Paamiut district

Paamiut

Type No. description Construction year date image receipt
Monument protection B-30 The fish store is right by the harbor basin. The half-timbered building designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller is clad with wooden boards. 1919 February 13, 2013 [91]
B-61 The salt house is attached directly to the B-30 and is architecturally similar. It is also from Helge Bojsen-Møller and is a timber-framed timber-framed building. It consists of only one room and has a mezzanine floor . 1920 [92]
B-83 The church was designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller . It is the first building that the architect drew in Greenland. The building is a modern stave church based on the Norwegian model, which makes it unique in Greenland. The facade is salmon-colored to red-brown, the edges are clay-colored and the roof shingles are green. The windows and the door are white. Ole Nielsen extended the church by two window lengths in the 1980s. The church stands at the point where three streets of Paamiuts cross, which means that one can speak of the central point of the city. There is a cemetery around the church. 1909 November 2, 1998 Paamiut Church.jpg [93]
worth preserving B-7 The sales assistant's apartment is a timber-framed building with planking, designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller . After it was built in 1939, it was rebuilt again. It is now part of the museum. 1939 memorable [94]
B-10 The head of trade's apartment was built in 1839 as an administrator's residence. The multi-storey building is clad with boards and stands on a high stone base. In 1962 it was rebuilt and in 1976 a porch was added . Today it serves as a museum building. 1839 memorable Handelschefboligen Paamiut.jpg [95]
B-15 The post office is a half-timbered building with board cladding. It used to be a shop. The building was remodeled in the 1970s. 1939 - [96]
B-17 The timber-framed carpentry workshop was given its appearance in 1900. It consists of two assembled buildings, one of which was an old cooperage. There is a clock house on the southwest corner. It serves as a museum building. 1900 memorable [97]
B-19 It is an outbuilding made of coarse stone and gradually enlarged. Around 1900 it was used as a hospital. When it was extended in 1919, however, it served as a goat shed. around 1850 memorable [98]
B-38 The trading office temporarily served as a post office. It is a timber-framed building clad with boards and has retained its ornamental details. Today it is used as a museum building. around 1925 memorable [99]
B-54 It is a storage building that was originally used as a tranlager. It was originally more towards the water, but was moved to its current position when the harbor basin was expanded. The building is built into the small slope and has rough stone walls that have been painted yellow. The gables are clad with wooden boards. around 1860 memorable [100]
B-55 The museum was built as a provisions store. In 1948 it was a post office. It has only served as a museum since its restoration in 1981. It is the best-preserved stone building in town. 1866 memorable [101]
B-56 The Eisenkramladen is a timber-framed building clad with boards with two floors and a loft. It used to be used as a warehouse. It was rebuilt in the 1970s. 1931 - [102]
B-63 The smithy and cooperage is a stone house that was given its current appearance in 1927. 1927 - [103]
B-68 The appearance of the warehouse resembles the building B-54 next to it, but it is about 40 years younger. It is also built into the slope, has yellow stone walls and wooden gables. It used to be used as a boat and coal house. 1901 - [104]
B-85 The mission building was initially a school. The building originally stood in place of the assistant's apartment B-7 and was moved to its current location when it was built in 1939. It already existed before 1860. The building is a half-timbered building with paneling. ???? memorable [105]
B-86 The pastor's apartment was also created by Helge Bojsen-Møller . The building erected in 1922 was extended by himself in 1936. It is surrounded by an enclosed garden. 1922 memorable [106]
B-93 Official residence 1948 memorable [107]
B-94 The former telegraphy expedition building now serves as a residential building. 1947 memorable [108]
B-95 Telegraph administrator's apartment 1947 memorable [109]
B-96 Official residence 1947 memorable [110]
B-314 ???? - [111]
B-406 It is a self-built home from the 1920s. 1920s memorable [112]
B-980 ???? - [113]
area particularly worthy of preservation 20C1 The area forms the historical area from the colonial era. It consists of the port area with storage and production buildings, the area with the houses of the trade employees and an area containing church buildings from the times of missionary work. The decorative Bagerbroen ( German  baker's bridge), which spans a small river in the colonial area, is also worth highlighting . It was built in the early 1920s and was the only way to cross the river for 30 years. - - Paamiut Walzaehne.jpg [114]

Ivittuut district

Ivittuut

De gule bynotater name numerous important buildings in Ivittuut, but no protection status is given in the abandoned settlement in the municipal plan .

Ittoqqortoormiit district

Ittoqqortoormiit

Type No. description Construction year date image receipt
worth preserving B-22 The building was erected before 1940. ???? - [115]
B-33 The building is one of the oldest in the city and dates from the year it was founded. 1925 - [116]
B-36 The building is one of the oldest in the city and dates from the year it was founded. 1925 - [117]
area worth preserving 40A1 The range includes GTO type houses from the 1950s and 1960s. - - [118]

Ammassalik District

Tasiilaq

Note: two of the buildings do not appear on the municipal plan , but are on the list of the National Museum in de gule bynotater .

Type No. description Construction year date image receipt
Monument protection B-41 The old church of Tasiilaq was designed by Peter Anton Cortsen in 1903 . However, it was only inaugurated in 1908. At first it also served as a school building. In 1955 it was extended by the architectural firm of Grønlands Tekniske Organization . It was renovated in 1989 and has served as a museum ever since. The building is a half-timbered building with wood paneling. On the roof, which is covered with shingles, there is a ridge turret . The ends of the rafters are visible, as was typical for Peter Anton Cortsen. 1908 November 2, 1998 Tasiilaq old church.jpg [119]
B-42 The missionary's apartment was one of the first three houses brought to Tasiilaq in 1894, but was not built until the early summer of 1895. It is a half-timbered building with board cladding and a shingled roof. The building was designed by the architect CI Kyhn. The windows were later moved several times. The vestibule on the north facade and the extension on the west gable were added later. 1895 [120]
B-47 The colonial administrator's apartment was built in 1895 with the second ship that reached the new colony. It is also a clad half-timbered building designed by CI Kyhn. The building was expanded in 1904 according to plans by Peter Anton Cortsen , with the addition of the extension on the east gable. From 1928 to 1948 the building was a hospital. It was probably painted in the yellow typical of Greenland hospitals. The vestibule on the west side probably dates from 1952 when the building was used as a treatment center for tuberculosis sufferers. 1895 [121]
B-48 The helper's apartment, which is called Skæven because the building is partly sunk into the ground and is therefore crooked. It was probably designed by Peter Anton Cortsen . In the 1920s the building was extended by four meters. Presumably at the same time a small coal store was built. 1904 [122]
B-51 The building called the Kastellet was one of the first three houses to be built in Tasiilaq. It came here in 1894. The other building from that year was demolished in the 1940s. This makes the Kastellet the oldest preserved house in Tasiilaq. It initially served as a residence for the people who founded the colony at that time. It was then used for all sorts of purposes. Today it is mainly an office building. The half-timbered building was originally clad with wood. Later this facade was replaced by one made of roofing felt. There is now a paneling on the building again. 1894 [123]
B-55 The catechist's apartment was built in 1950 and is now a pawnshop. 1950 [124]
worth preserving B-7 The telegraph master's apartment was the first building south of the city. It was built in 1925 according to general plans by Helge Bojsen-Møller . The building is a half-timbered building with a board facade and roof shingles. In 1951 it was expanded and renovated in the late 1980s. 1925 memorable [125]
B-29 The vegetable house is a wooden house, the facades of which are surrounded by grassy peat walls. It is probably the best preserved building of its kind in Greenland. 1950 memorable [126]
B-30 The building was laid out in 1928 according to plans by Helge Bojsen-Møller . It was used to serve the inspector for East Greenland. The only East Greenland inspector, however, was Ejnar Mikkelsen from 1933 to 1950. In 1961 the building received an extension on the west side, which had been designed by the architectural office of Grønlands Tekniske Organization . The dormer window on the south side was also created during a later renovation. 1928 memorable Tasiilaq houses.jpg [127]
B-32 It is a single family house from 1947. It was built as a wooden house on a concrete foundation. To the east of the building there is a plateau that was probably used as a garden in the past. 1947 memorable [128]
B-33 The building was built according to plans by Helge Bojsen-Møller and served as a warehouse and bakery. The ground floor of the extraordinarily large building was a coal store and is made of concrete, while the upper floor is made of wood. In 1986 a shop was added to the south side. 1940 memorable
B-35 The carpentry workshop is a small half-timbered building with wooden paneling. According to the year of its establishment, it must have been brought to Tasiilaq later. 1889 memorable
B-54 It is the annex to the inspector's apartment. ???? - Tasiilaq houses.jpg [129]
B-59 The building is the mortuary chapel. ???? - [130]
area particularly worthy of preservation 30C1 The area forms the oldest part of the city. The former mission and trading colony was operated here from 1894. - - [131]
area worth preserving 30A3 The residential area from the 1960s consists largely of GTO semi-detached houses. - - View of the town of Tasiilaq.jpg [132]

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 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 aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv Nuuk Byatlas at sermersooq.gl (.pdf)
  2. Kirker for spæk / Churches for blubber in greenland today No. 28/2016. P. 12/13.
  3. a b c d e f g De historiske bygninger omkring Ilinniarfissuaq on the website of the University of Greenland (.pdf)
  4. Niels Lynges Hus at upernavik.museum.gl
  5. 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 aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au De Gule Bynotater (.pdf)
  6. a b c d e f g List of listed buildings of the Kommuneqarfik Sermersooq on the website of the National Museum