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Grejsdal Church was built in 1959-1961. The architect was Jens Malling Pedersen from Vejle. The church, which is situated on a hill on the west-side of the Grejsdalen valley, is simple in style and built according to an elongated, pentagonal ground plan. The building has no windows, but the walls are penetrated by a multitude of clear glass stones, which add an exciting and changing light to the church room.
The roof of the church slants out from the hillside from the low western end to the tall, strutting eastern gable, where the roof ends in a point that rests on the bell yoke.
The church is white on the inside as well as the outside. The ceiling was made from raw logs and the remaining wood is kept in red and blue or slightly guilded tones. The floor is made from tiles from the Danish island of Bornholm. |
Grejsdal Church was built in 1959-1961. The architect was Jens Malling Pedersen from Vejle. The church, which is situated on a hill on the west-side of the Grejsdalen valley, is simple in style and built according to an elongated, pentagonal ground plan. The building has no windows, but the walls are penetrated by a multitude of clear glass stones, which add an exciting and changing light to the church room.
The roof of the church slants out from the hillside from the low western end to the tall, strutting eastern gable, where the roof ends in a point that rests on the bell yoke.
The church is white on the inside as well as the outside. The ceiling was made from raw logs and the remaining wood is kept in red and blue or slightly guilded tones. The floor is made from tiles from the Danish island of Bornholm.
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Facts on the church/monastry
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| Architect |
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Jens Malling Pedersen |
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| Year of construction |
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1959 |
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| Opening periods (DD-MM-YYYY) |
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