Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Enjoy fine dining and lodging at our many motels, eateries, gas stations and... castles conveniently placed along highways stretching cross country. Bottom postcard is especially for a certain janepeepshow.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Sweden House Smorgasbord
Anyone fancy a wide range of delicious Swedish cuisine? Do not look further, go and try Sweden House's smorgasbord and enjoy the lovely service of their blond and tall waitresses! I did some research about the restaurant and found out that it was located in Tampa, Florida (at 2720 North Dale Mabry Highway to be precise). The postcards most likely date back from the early 1970s or late 1960s. Does anyone know if it is still around? Please let us know.

Thursday, May 22, 2008
Mile high birthday
I turned 29 on May 19th, so happy late birthday to me! This Dean Morris card says it even better though. You can find more funny, clever and somewhat rude British flavoured cards on their website.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Shopping Spree - Part 8
More retro photos of Domus stores in Sweden. Why? Because it's good for you. Someone please bring back Domus, we miss you. Oh and clean up on aisle three.
Related posts
Shopping Spree - Part 1
Shopping Spree - Part 2
Shopping Spree - Part 3
Shopping Spree - Part 4
Shopping Spree - Part 5
Shopping Spree - Part 6
Shopping Spree - Part 7
Related posts
Shopping Spree - Part 1
Shopping Spree - Part 2
Shopping Spree - Part 3
Shopping Spree - Part 4
Shopping Spree - Part 5
Shopping Spree - Part 6
Shopping Spree - Part 7
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Retro Stockholm
Since it is summer and very warm outside I am feeling kind of lazy. But I thought I would post two summer inspired photos depicting how Stockholm looked back in the late 1960s / early 1970s. It looks pretty much the same today, except the color of the train station which has been replaced. Enjoy!
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Shopping Spree - Part 6
Time again for another visit to some various Swedish shopping centers, as they looked back in the golden days of consuming. This time featuring Stockholm and Gothenburg. Do not forget to listen to "Retro Shopping Volume 1" while looking at the photos for the perfect mood setter.
Related posts:
Shopping Spree - Part 1
Shopping Spree - Part 2
Shopping Spree - Part 3
Shopping Spree - Part 4
Shopping Spree - Part 5
Related posts:
Shopping Spree - Part 1
Shopping Spree - Part 2
Shopping Spree - Part 3
Shopping Spree - Part 4
Shopping Spree - Part 5
Monday, February 26, 2007
NK in Malmo
Here are two postcards showing the old NK department store in Malmö, Sweden. NK (Nordiska Kompaniet / The Nordic Company) is one of the oldest merchandise companies in Sweden. The first, and biggest store opened in Stockholm in 1915 and featured Sweden's first escalators. Soon NK also had stores in Gothenburg and Malmö. The department store in Malmö was opened in 1963, but it was short lived due to very high maintenance costs. I remember visiting NK in Malmö when I was younger in the mid 1980s, I believe that the store was closed just a couple of years later. The building still stands there today, but it has been converted to a indoor shopping arcade called Hansa Compagniet - a very boring and typical looking shopping place.
Thursday, January 25, 2007
Vala Centrum
Väla Centrum is a shopping mall located in southern Sweden just outside of Helsingborg. Been planing on writing about it for a long time now but have not been able to find anything useful - until now. This is the mall I grew up with. Many many Friday evenings and Saturdays were spent here when I traveled there going shopping with my family as a kid back in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Väla Centrum was built in 1974 and was at its opening the largest shopping center in southern Sweden with 20 stores, two large "anchor stores" (Wessels and Obs!), a restaurant and a cafe. The three photos below were found on a postcard dating back the late 1970s. Pay attention to the cool interior and color scheme, not forgetting the birdcage and "fountain" under it! This mall truly took its inspiration from the American malls that was built in the 1960s. I have never seen any other mall in Sweden which has or have had a birdcage. I actually remembering seeing canaries in it too until the late 1980s when they for one reason or another decided to remove them. The bird sculpture is namned "Fågeln" (The bird) and was created by artist Bertil Valliens. It still stands there today, but at another location (see bottom of the post for a photograph).
However a large addition was added in 1997 making the mall almost unrecognizable and a few years later they decided to remove the anchor stores and convert the space into store space for smaller shops. The only things that remind us now of its past are the groovy orange light fixtures seen below, although now in a different color scheme and with other lamps, and the bird cage. On the outside you can still see the brown 1970s brick walls, although now mostly covered with signs and added glass walls. There are also rumors that they are going to extend the mall with another 41.000 squaremeters of new store space, removing the old courtyard with its fountains and thus making the mall truly unrecognizable.
If you have any memories or comments about this mall, let them be heard in the comments section please.
Väla Centrum was built in 1974 and was at its opening the largest shopping center in southern Sweden with 20 stores, two large "anchor stores" (Wessels and Obs!), a restaurant and a cafe. The three photos below were found on a postcard dating back the late 1970s. Pay attention to the cool interior and color scheme, not forgetting the birdcage and "fountain" under it! This mall truly took its inspiration from the American malls that was built in the 1960s. I have never seen any other mall in Sweden which has or have had a birdcage. I actually remembering seeing canaries in it too until the late 1980s when they for one reason or another decided to remove them. The bird sculpture is namned "Fågeln" (The bird) and was created by artist Bertil Valliens. It still stands there today, but at another location (see bottom of the post for a photograph).
However a large addition was added in 1997 making the mall almost unrecognizable and a few years later they decided to remove the anchor stores and convert the space into store space for smaller shops. The only things that remind us now of its past are the groovy orange light fixtures seen below, although now in a different color scheme and with other lamps, and the bird cage. On the outside you can still see the brown 1970s brick walls, although now mostly covered with signs and added glass walls. There are also rumors that they are going to extend the mall with another 41.000 squaremeters of new store space, removing the old courtyard with its fountains and thus making the mall truly unrecognizable.
If you have any memories or comments about this mall, let them be heard in the comments section please.
Monday, August 14, 2006
Malmo in the 1960s
I have decided to continue posting old postcards from Malmö. Here are four more which depicts how the central parts of Malmö looked in the 1960s, notice how vibrant everything looks and feels. I lived there myself for almost two years between 2002 and 2004, can't really say I appreciate the changes the city went through in the 1990s. It feels very different from what I remember from the 1980s when I was a kid. Anyways, this one is for you MissPeepshow, enjoy!
Sunday, July 30, 2006
The Crown Prince of Malmo
Malmö's first skyscraper (and one of Sweden's earliest) was built in 1964 and namned Kronprinsen (The Crown Prince). It stands 27 floors tall and features 700 apartments which can house as many as 3 000 people. The cost of it was a staggering 90 million SEK (approx. $12 000 000).
Standing at the top of the building, on the visitors terrace, one could see all the way over to Copenhagen on clear days. Using the binoculars placed there for viewing pleasure, you could probably also see right into the famous SAS-hotel designed by Arne Jacobsen (more on that in a future post). Using the high-speed elevators allowed you to speed to the top-floor of the Crown Prince in only 30 seconds where you would find the posh restaurant "Översten"(The Colonel) with its swank skybar designed by NK, the restaurant is still operational today.
At the base of the skyscraper a shopping and sports center was built. The residents of the Crown Prince were probably never meant to leave their homes. Everything they ever needed was located a few feet from their apartments, including a 14-lane Bowling alley and Tennis Courts. But what about your car? It is parked in the huge underground garage which can hold up to 1,300 cars. It was one of the biggest underground garages in Scandinavia at the time.
Times has changed since 1964, taller skyscrapers has emerged - but Kronprinsen is still the Crown Prince of Malmö.
More information at Wikipedia (Swedish)


























