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Are drugs legal in Christiania Copenhagen?

Are drugs legal in Christiania Copenhagen?

Still at core an anarchist community, Christiania remains a place where drugs are freely sold and consumed without overt interference from the police — a weed-smoking Disneyland.

Do people live in Christiania?

Around 1,000 people live in Christiania and every year more than 500,000 people come to visit. A lot of the people living in Christiania built their homes themselves giving the area an extremely interesting architectural feel.

Is Christiania part of EU?

“You Are Now Leaving the European Union” Forty years ago, squatters in Copenhagen set up the “free zone” of Christiania inside an old military base. The main drag is now a drug market called Pusher Street. But against all odds, and with a little help from the establishment, Christiania is doing just fine.

Why is Christiania closed?

Residents in Christiania decided in January to close off the entrance to the neighbourhood with a fence due to concerns the cannabis trade, which is usually conducted in the areas affected by the ban, would spread to nearby areas.

What kind of people live in Christiania Denmark?

Today, Christiania is home to some elegant restaurants and a popular stop on Copenhagen’s tourist trail, billed to visitors via bus advertisements as a must-see attraction alongside the Little Mermaid statue. This gentrification has driven up rent further. Some of Christiania’s 900 residents are identified as middle class.

When did the Freetown Christiania start in Denmark?

The famous Danish freetown Christiania was founded in 1971 when a group of hippies took over abandoned military barracks and their surrounding along the Christianshavn canals and developed the area to an alternative society with own set of rules, independent of the government.

What was the name of the hippie commune in Copenhagen?

(CNN) — Seen from a boat drifting along Copenhagen’s wide canals, the neighborhood of Christiania is a verdant enclave tucked beneath a thick canopy of trees. Half a century after it was founded as a breakaway anarchist commune, it seems to have matured into a slice of paradise. But all is not well in Christiania.

Where is the Paradise Lost commune in Copenhagen?

Just across the water, in an area known as Papirøen (Paper Island), a former paper factory is being colonised by a food market, a gallery and design offices, preparing the area for transformation into a luxury development.