Hammarby Sjö

These recordingswere taken at Hammarby Sjö. Once a nautical industrial area, much of the shoreline around this waterway has transformed from factories and warehouses into newly built condominiums. The working boats that once lined the coast of Södermalm at the northern edge of the water have been replaced with house boats and other luxury vessels. The ferry I have recorded through the hydrophone runs on weekdays between Hammarby and Södermalm and is, at the time of this writing, free of charge.

 

The first recording is from an ice cutter that was once moored on the Södermalm bank. It had tiny rooms, where a collection of seafarers, artists and young itinerants lived. The captain was a collector of old cars who took exquisite care of the 1940s ship, which was still sometimes called into service for its original function. As the new condominiums went up in Hammarby, across the water, he looked on it with salty distaste! He also rented the 1940s vessel out once a year to take politicians to the yearly Almedalen political meeting in Visby on the island of Gotland, complete with gourmet meals cooked by one of the ship's own residents. When a friend who lived on the ship told me it had been sold to a Norwegian tourist concern, I took these pictures and recordings.

 

The second, underwater recording here was one of the first times I ever used a hydrophone. I stood in wonder, transported to the lake floor, listening to the machinery of ships and bridges far away. There is an ephemeral Stockholm that is purely nautical under the water, and to use a hydrophone in this way is to traverse it.