Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Skogskyrkogården' has mentioned 'Chapel' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
Uppstxc3xa5ndelsekapellet (the Resurrection Chapel), designed by Sigurd Lewerentz | WIKI |
Skogskapellet cemetery chapel, designed by Gunnar Asplund | WIKI |
The paths then rejoin and pass along a dead-straight path through a dense grove of tall pine trees, the so-called Way of Seven Wells, leading to the "Uppstxc3xa5ndelsekapellet" or Resurrection Chapel. | WIKI |
Lewerentz's contribution mainly concerned the landscape but also the main entrance and the classical "Uppstxc3xa5ndelsekapellet" or Resurrection Chapel, which was built in 1925. | WIKI |
The small chapel, set on a Tuscan peristyle and featuring a gold statue on the roof by Carl Milles, was in fact derived from a "primitive hut" that Asplund had happened to see in a garden at Liselund. | WIKI |
Work began in 1917 and the formal consecration of Skogskyrkogxc3xa5rden (The Woodland Cemetery) and its Woodland Chapel took place in 1920. | UNESCO |
The Woodland Chapel is intimately integrated into its setting, whilst the impact of the later group of chapels is heightened by the use of their landscape as a background. | UNESCO |
Within the boundaries of the 108.08 ha property are located all the elements necessary to express the Outstanding Universal Value of Skogskyrkogxc3xa5rden, including the landscape dominated by a forest of tall pine trees, the Woodland Chapel (1920), the service building designed by Asplund (1923-24), the Chapel of Resurrection designed by Lewerentz (1925), the group of three chapels (Faith, Hope, and the Holy Cross) with common mortuary and crematorium facilities designed by Asplund (1937-1940), the granite cross on the lawn outside the chapels designed by Asplund, and the 4 km-long surrounding granite wall. | UNESCO |