
Glæshus Tower
Malmö, Sweden
Twelve storeys of workspace wrapped in low-iron glass and brushed brass, with stepped terraces shaped by the path of the winter sun.

Norden Atelier is a small Copenhagen studio designing considered buildings rooted in light, material, and landscape. Houses, public buildings, and adaptive reuse across the Nordic countries.
A new Copenhagen practice. Nine architects, one studio manager, four drawing boards. We take on six to eight projects a year, with care.
We design buildings that ask very little of their visitors and a great deal of their architects. The detail that disappears takes three weeks. The wall that looks effortless is built by a mason who has been laying brick for forty-one years.

Malmö, Sweden
Twelve storeys of workspace wrapped in low-iron glass and brushed brass, with stepped terraces shaped by the path of the winter sun.

Aarhus, Denmark
An adaptive reuse of a 19th century grain silo into a small museum of decorative arts, with daylight as the primary material.

Bornholm, Denmark
A low, lime-washed villa set into the granite edge of the Baltic, framing the horizon through three deep window rooms.
“We want the building to be the second thing you notice, after the weather.”
Ida Lindqvist, founding partner

Notes from the first three months of design work on the studio’s largest commission, after winning the invited competition in Malmö.
Read essay
A note on why we keep returning to the same handful of materials, and what we mean when we say a building should be quiet.
Read essay
A short field guide to how we measure, draw, and model daylight at the studio, and the small habits that have made the biggest difference.
Read essayWe respond to every enquiry within a working week. A first conversation is informal: a coffee in the studio, or a walk on the site if the weather is kind.
Studio contact