Huk, Norway

59.896°N 10.675°E / 59.896; 10.675

The public beach

Huk is a parkland and a sandy beach (Hukodden) at the furthest south of the Bygdøy peninsula west of the city center of Oslo, Norway.

The area was acquired by Aker municipality in 1921.[1] The bathing beach is divided into a regular public beach and a naturist beach area. The naturist beach is on a shank[2][3] northwest of Hukodden, formerly the garden of the brush manufacturer Jordan.[4][5]

Jens Stoltenberg's second government bought in 2005 a villa with shoreline bordering the public beach at Huk, and in 2006 opened a new public beach there.[6] The villa was later resold but the shoreline is still open for all.[7]

Just off the beach area are sculptures, Large Arch (1963–1969) by Henry Moore[8] and Icarus (1965) and Døhlen by Anne Sofie Døhlen (1967).[1]

The area is accessible by bus number 30 from central Oslo.[9]

Huk as seen from the Oslofjord. Naturist beach left, the main beach and the new beach to the right

References

  1. Knut Are Tvedt, ed. (2000). Oslo byleksikon (4th ed.). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. p. 209. (in Norwegian) ISBN 82-573-0815-3
  2. Huk naturiststrand på Bygdøy www,nudist.no (in Norwegian)
  3. Huk Naturiststrand www.oslofjorden.com (in Norwegian)
  4. NRK – Første gang på naturiststrand» NRK (in Norwegian)
  5. Huk & Paradisbukta www.visitnorway.com (in English)
  6. Huk-eiendommen på Bygdøy sikres som friluftsområde Government of Norway Oct 21, 2005 (in Norwegian)
  7. Huk badeplass, Bygdø (in Norwegian)
  8. Henry Moore Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian)
  9. Bus line 30 Archived 2015-12-08 at the Wayback Machine www.ruter.no 30 Nydalen-Bygdøy](in Norwegian)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.