Designmuseum Danmark occupies the former Frederiks Hospital, a grand Rococo building completed in 1757 and designed by court architect Nicolai Eigtved. The hospital served Copenhagen's citizens for over a century before closing in 1910, after which the building was carefully converted to house what is today one of Europe's foremost collections of design and applied arts. The symmetrical yellow façade, cobblestone courtyard, and wrought-iron gates signal immediately that this is not an ordinary museum — the architecture itself is the first exhibit.
The museum traces its origins to 1890, when it was founded as the Danish Museum of Decorative Art with the explicit mission of raising the standard of Danish industrial craftsmanship by exposing designers and craftspeople to historical and international examples. That reformist ambition proved extraordinarily productive: by the mid-20th century, Danish design had become a global benchmark for functional beauty. The permanent collection documents this arc in full, from 18th-century Baroque silverwork and Royal Copenhagen porcelain to the spare, organic furniture forms that defined the Danish Modern movement. Pieces by Hans J. Wegner — including variants of his 1949 Round Chair, called simply "The Chair" after it appeared in the 1960 Kennedy-Nixon televised debate — sit alongside work by Arne Jacobsen, Kaare Klint, and Verner Panton, giving visitors a material history of how Denmark came to dominate 20th-century design discourse.
Beyond furniture, the collections extend into fashion and textiles, graphic design, industrial objects, and Asian decorative arts accumulated through centuries of Danish trade. Rotating temporary exhibitions bring contemporary Danish and international designers into conversation with the permanent holdings, ensuring the museum reads as a living institution rather than a design mausoleum. The newly renovated galleries, reopened in 2022 after an extensive refurbishment, present the collections with exceptional clarity across thematic and chronological sequences that reward both first-time visitors and specialists.
The museum is located on Bredgade in the Frederiksstaden district, a short walk from the Marble Church and Amalienborg Palace. Plan at least two hours to do the permanent collection justice; the museum shop is stocked with serious design editions rather than tourist trinkets, and the courtyard café is an ideal stop between galleries. Audio guides and family trails are available, and the museum is easily reached by bus or Metro via Kongens Nytorv station.