Gärdet

Ghost Installation: Gärdet

This is an excerpt from a sound installation I made for this area of the city. To read or listen to more, you may go here.

Gärdet, an open field which was once used for military exercises, and then taken up as the gathering point of the workers’ movement marches on the First of May. Gärdet is flanked on one side by the central Television and Radio houses for Stockholm and for Sweden. Berwaldhallen is the radio's concert house, and is still in operation today, with its own dedicated ensembles, and its music hall interpolated into the earth. The radio was a special force in Swedish society in the days when there were only one television station and two radio channels. The architecture of these two broadcast headquarters, built in the 1960s, possesses all the most monolithic style of the folkhemmet era.x

Nearby is the Y-K House, a special apartment building designed for  newly working women in the 1930s. The Film institute is also thick with the ghost of a specific time in Sweden's history, and with those of Olof Palme and Harry Schein, who were staunch advocates of the institution. It was designed with an eye on one side (pictured to the right), symbolizing the watchful eye of the Swedish cultural establishment keeping an eye on the military, which still has facilities in the neighborhood. Gärdet was used for the protest marches on the First of May, from 1890 up until the 1960s, and was also the site of iconic music festivals, as well as Drakfestivalen (the Kite Festival), instigated by artists like Bengt Carling. Today the field is criss-crossed with dog walkers in summer, skiers in winter, all under a vast net of broadcast signals between the Radio and Television and Kaknästornet–a tower at the far end of the field from the above institutions which is an important node in Sweden's broadcast network, and itself an architectural landmark.