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Nýlenda – Nýlendugata 31, relocated at The Reykjavík City Museum
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The house Nýlenda was built in 1883, at Nýlendugata 31, the street being named after the house. In 1907 the house was rebuilt to a great extent. Nýlenda is a half-stone house, i.e. the long side walls are made of hewn stone, while the gables are built of timber, a local building method. The first occupants of the house were the labourer Gísli Jónsson, his wife Katrín Magnúsdóttir and their daughter Kristjana. Nýlenda was moved to The Reykjavík City Museum in 1973.
.....-The Reykjavík City Museum-….. collects and conserves objects from Reykjavík cultural history and carries out research on them, and promulgates knowledge of the history and living conditions of the people of Reykjavík from the Settlement Age to the present day. Arbaer (Árbær) was an established farm well into the 20th century, and The Reykjavík City Museum opened there in 1957. Arbaer is now an open air museum with more than 20 buildings which form a town square, a village and a farm. Most of the buildings have been relocated from central Reykjavík.
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Iceland, Ísland, Reykjavik, Reykjavík, The Reykjavik City Museum, The Reykjavík City Museum, minjasafn Reykjavíkur, Arbaer, Árbær, Arbaearsafn, Árbæjarsafn, building, timber, timbur, antiques, minjar, fornminjar, timber house, timburhús, museum, safn, St. Pall, St. Peter, New Iceland, Nýja Ísland, Kukl á Jörð, Kukl on Earth |
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