Den Uendelige Bro is a circular bathing bridge and artwork that stretches from Ballehage beach below Varna Palace, a few kilometers south of Aarhus city center, into Aarhus Bay.
Designed by architects Niels Povlsgaard and Johan Gjødes, the bridge was originally built in connection with the ARoS exhibition Sculpture By The Sea 2015, where it gained great popularity. Den Uendelige Bro, like the other artworks built along the coast, was intended to be temporary from the start and was dismantled immediately after the exhibition ended.
However, a popular demand quickly arose to have the bridge returned as a permanent installation. The Aarhus City Council therefore decided in 2017 to allocate the two million kroner needed to restore the bridge to a more durable version, as well as the 150,000 kroner it costs annually to demolish the bridge in the autumn and rebuild it in the spring. On June 22nd of the same year, the bridge was inaugurated and was used for a wedding for the first time.
Aarhus offers civil weddings at some of the city's most famous landmarks - including the Infinite Bridge. Couples can choose whether the wedding should take place on the beach by the bridge, in the middle of the bridge or on the bridge in the water.
The bridge has a diameter of 60 meters and a circumference of 188 meters. To create the 2.4 meter wide deck all around, 4 km of weather-resistant larch planks were used and to hold the whole thing in place, a total of 333 meters of pipes were hammered into the seabed.
Source: Wikipedia