Summer solstice in Reykjavík
This is the view from Arnarhóll in central Reykjavík, shortly before sunset (about 10:45pm) on the summer solstice a few days ago. Click for a larger version.
[For the uninitiated: yes, that thing on the left edge really is a 20-foot-tall wall mural depicting a sheep. No, I do not know why it is there.]
The sky looked nice. The mountains looked nice. Most of the city center looked nice.
But that big beige-and-turquoise industrial facility in the middle doesn’t look too nice.
Good thing Faxaskáli is being replaced by a stonking big music hall and conference building, supposedly ready three-and-a-half years from now (I’ll bet you a six-pack of Staropramen that it’ll be five years and a budget overrun of, say, 60%). It is government-sponsored, of course, and the inaugural concert will probably feature the wails and moans and tut-tuts of Iceland’s fiscal conservatives as accompaniment.
Assuming the architects know their stuff, the view from Arnarhóll will certainly be nicer afterwards. But the new building will presumably be taller than Faxaskáli, so I’ll have to walk another three minutes and look at the sunset from the other side of the music hall. Life keeps getting harder on me.
Then again, I can always enjoy the sky from my bedroom balcony. Below is that view, captured at approximate geographical midnight (1:35am) on the summer solstice. Click for a larger version. And excuse the overexposure. :)


June 27th, 2005 at 11:17 am
They damn well better build that concert hall. I have to have someplace to play when I come back… and if it obstructs your view, then T.U.F.F. At least you’ll have something pretty to listen to on your way past it to take your next set of incredibly beautiful photos of the next summer solstice.
June 27th, 2005 at 11:29 am
I was being sarcastic in saying “life keeps getting harder on me” for having to walk three more minutes. I’m not really concerned about the music hall obstructing my view. :)