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
Skogskapellet cemetery chapel, designed by Gunnar Asplund
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.
Lewerentz's contribution mainly concerned the landscape but also the main entrance and the classical "Uppstxc3xa5ndelsekapellet" or Resurrection Chapel, which was built in 1925.
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.
Work began in 1917 and the formal consecration of Skogskyrkogxc3xa5rden (The Woodland Cemetery) and its Woodland Chapel took place in 1920.
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.
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.