A Week in Sweden!

Our trip to Gothenburg, Sweden started over the weekend we arrived in Europe. We had Sunday free to explore the city – I walked around during the day with some of my group, exploring neighborhoods and parks in the pretty city.  I got a monster cinnamon bun in the neighborhood of Haga, climbed some old ramparts to reach a scenic viewpoint of the city, and ended the day with a picnic on the roof of our new Swedish friend’s student apartment.  We’re lucky that we had a chance to partner with the Swedes on our project, because it certainly helped to know some locals while visiting!

 

 

 

 

On Monday, we traveled to Hammarkullen and started the Dare2Build workshop with Swedish architecture students. The workshop centered around beautifying an existing repair shop built for the residents of Hammarkullen and installing a new recycling center, both of which are made out of large shipping containers. The first day brought lots of planning and design and even a little bit of demolition. We checked out the job sight, had a tool container delivered, and broke into teams to develop a vision for the project.

 

 

 

 

 

On Tuesday, we started work on the site. While the team leads finalized the plan for the project, I helped to organize the tool container and prepare the landscaping area. In the afternoon, we had the opportunity to peek inside of Fixoteket, the workshop in the connected red containers half of the project is centered around.  It serves as a valuable purpose in the community, to help them repair and repurpose belongings to help the underreasourced community save money and collect tax benefits. Inside the containers, we found lots of hand tools and materials necessary to rebuild everything from broken bicycles to pieces of furniture.

Wednesday was Sweden’s national holiday (think July 4th), so we had the day off! We spent it with our Swedish friends, going to Gothenburg’s nearest natural splendors – the archipelago.  After taking the ferry past many of the islands, we arrived at the beach house of one of our new friends. We spent the day braving the cold Scandinavian water and relaxing – the latter was very easy to do on the island.

Thursday starting in Hammarkullen again, where Nick, Juan, and I worked on getting the Fixoteket ready for a fresh coat of paint.  After wrapping up work on the job site, we headed over to the Living Lab for the awards ceremony that night. It was really interesting to finally get to see the Living Lab after hearing so much about it throughout the year, and we were thrilled to deliver our prototype to its new home.

Finally, on Friday we were back at the work site in Hammarkullen. After finishing up the prep work from Thursday of scraping away the chipped paint, we got started on applying a coat of primer to the shipping container. Below you can see our progress behind the wonderful invention that is kebab pizza. It felt good to leave the project in Hammarkullen looking much better than we found it, and I look forward to hearing from our friends in Sweden about how it turns out at the end of the summer.

the adventure ch. 5: The Gothenburg Archipelago

the adventure: paused

~ we interrupt our regularly scheduled programming to present a series of photos of the buildings around Gothenburg and out-of-context quotes that have been overheard during this visit ~

6/5 nature x cities

   

Jackson introduced us to Marina, who introduced us to Eva, who invited Erik (and Caroline and I), who invited Tobias & Hannah to come climb with them. It’s amazing (1) how fast networks of climbing friends come together, and (2) how fast you can get to climbing areas from the city–just a 20 minute bus ride and a 10 minute hike.

This is the view of the nearby town from the top of one of the giant ridges that we hiked up, rappelled down, crack-climbed back up, and rappelled down again!

 

6/4 “fry a burger, not the planet”

We missed our tram… and two more came within 6 minutes! Public transportation here is incredibly thorough and helpful.

From a sustainability perspective, the public transportation and vegetarian options are excellent. For some reason, however, the recycling collection is scarce and compost collection is virtually nonexistent.

This is the entrance to Hammarkullen (which other posts have described in some detail). Hammarkullen has an interesting history–it was developed with a ton of high-quality, high-density housing in response to a population boom. The rapid growth of central Gothenburg was expected to reach Hammarkullen but it never did, leaving miles of near empty land between them. When refugee populations and other immigrants from Chile, Somalia, etc. arrived in need of housing, they moved in to the nice, inexpensive, but rather isolated housing there. Fixoteket is, in part, a way to reinvigorate the community and help make it a more vibrant place to live.

Anna & Caroline took a break to enjoy some of the playground for the kids of Hammarkullen.

the adventure progresses to Hammarkullen

National Sweden Day

Today, June 6, was the National Day of Sweden and a public holiday so some of us took a trip down to the archipelago. Jackson and Robin brought us to one of the small islands where their friend Sarah (sp?) had a summer home. We enjoyed the beautiful weather on the beach and swimming in the ocean.

the adventure begins

 

Day 4: Swedish Independence Day

We had the day off from the Dare2Build workshop today because it was Swedish Independence Day. To celebrate, the Compostmate team, the Vaxthus team, and the Chalmers Entrepreneurship students all went to explore the islands in the archipelago. I had an amazing time walking around one of the island and experiencing Swedish culture. The day was a complete success thanks to the organization and generosity of the Chalmers students!