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Fire destroys Copenhagen’s 17th-century old Stock Exchange, collapses spire, reminiscent of Paris’ Notre-Dame cathedral

  • A fire hit Copenhagen’s Old Stock Exchange on Tuesday, one of the Danish capital’s best-known buildings, engulfing its spire which collapsed onto the roof
  • The cause of the fire was not immediately known

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Firefighters work as smoke rises out of the Old Stock Exchange in Copenhagen, Denmark on Tuesday. Photo: AP
Reuters

A fire ripped through Copenhagen’s Old Stock Exchange, one of the Danish capital’s best-known buildings, on Tuesday, engulfing its spire which collapsed in a scene reminiscent of the 2019 blaze at Paris’ Notre-Dame cathedral.

Emergency services, employees from the Danish Chamber of Commerce, including its CEO Brian Mikkelsen, and even passers-by were seen carrying large paintings away from the building in a race to save historic artefacts from the flames.

“It is a national disaster,” Mikkelsen told reporters.

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“We are saving everything we possibly can,” Copenhagen fire department chief Jakob Vedsted Andersen told reporters.

Plumes of smoke billow from the historic Boersen stock exchange building. Photo: AFP
Plumes of smoke billow from the historic Boersen stock exchange building. Photo: AFP

Denmark’s National Museum sent 25 employees to the scene to help evacuate cultural artefacts and paintings, it said on X.

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