Three-Day Trip to Aarhus💡
🍋🟩This is my personal experience of a three-day (two-night) trip to Aarhus during the autumn break in Denmark. For transportation within the city, I bought a Midtrafik day pass for 49 DKK per day. 🍋🟩Day 1 👉🏻Arrival: 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. train from Copenhagen, 200 DKK for an orange DSB ticket. 👉🏻Viking Museum: In the city center, small but quirky and interesting to look at, 30 DKK admission. 🍞Aarhus Cathedral: An important church in Aarhus’s history, with well-preserved murals, an organ, and some modern religious-themed decorations, free entry. 🍞Salling Rooftop: A rooftop garden on top of a shopping mall, offering panoramic views of Aarhus, spacious and open, free to visit. 😽Airbnb Stay: Less than 400 DKK per day, quite affordable, and the conditions were slightly better than a dormitory. 😽Endless Connection Fountain: Nice to see, but no need to go out of your way. It’s in the not-so-large city center of Aarhus, so you’ll likely pass by it at some point. ❤️Occupation Museum: 60 DKK student ticket. It seems that visiting this museum gives you a discount on the ticket to Den Gamle By, but the student ticket didn’t seem to apply. 🍭The history of Aarhus being occupied by Germany during WWII is presented interactively, with identity cards that let you listen to a (fictional) person’s life in Aarhus. 🍭The museum staff here were the friendliest I encountered during my visit. 🫖La Cabra Café: Bought a matcha latte for around 60 DKK. It was very aromatic and rich, and I thought it tasted quite good. 🌮ARoS Art Museum: 150 DKK student ticket. 🌈The rainbow panorama is a must-see attraction in Aarhus. I personally enjoyed the atmosphere of this art museum. 🌈The installation art on the ground floor might be a bit disturbing; I’m not very good at appreciating art, but I liked the installation with the Marseillaise and the Internationale. #Aarhus #DenmarkTravel #Denmark #CitySightseeing