Norveg
The museum is located in the municipal center, the village of Rørvik, near the Norwegian Coastal Express, and it is one of the characteristic landmarks along the coast. The museum's new building, which was opened by King Harald V on June 16, 2004, was designed by the architect Guðmundur Jónsson and was nominated for Europe's most important architectural award, the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture, in 2005.
The museum's founder, Paul Woxeng (1883–1967), began his cultural-historical collection work in 1919, and in 1932, he built a separate house for the collections on his farm, named Vågsenget. In 1970, the municipality of Vikna purchased the collection, and part of the property was designated a museum. Later, in the 1970s, the Woxeng Collection was moved to the Berggården trading post.
The Nord-Trøndelag Coastal Museum and Norveg comprise a total of about 15 points in Rørvik and Berggården, as well as in Vågsenget and the abandoned fishing village of Sør-Gjæslingen.
Norveg is Nord-Trøndelag's millennium site. The Coastal Museum is a division of the Midt Museum, where Sigmund Alsaker serves as director. The Midt Museum also includes the Norwegian Sawmill Museum, Nord-Trøndelag Art Museum, and Namdal Museum in Namsos, as well as museum sites without staff in six municipalities in Namdalen.
References
- ^ "Kystmuseet i Nord-Trøndelag / Norveg". Retrieved October 9, 2017.
- ^ "Klar for hektisk sommersesong". Namdalsavisa. June 8, 2017. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
- ^ Fossland Blom, Line (July 25, 2014). "Her serveres kun lokal mat, med ny meny hver uke". Lofotposten. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
- ^ "Norveg Coast Cultural Center". Archinect. Retrieved October 9, 2017.