Aarhus Universitets segl

Venue

EAHN 2026 will take place at the Aarhus University Conference Centre, located at the edge of the Aarhus University campus along the city’s outer ring road. 

 

The Conference venue offers modern facilities for academic exchange while remaining closely connected to the university’s distinctive park-like campus setting. The venue is located at Nordre Ringgade 3. It is approximately a 30-minute walk from Aarhus Cathedral and about 15 minutes by tram or bus. For information on public transportation in Aarhus, please check Midttrafik.


Keynote lectures will be held in the neighboring Aarhus University Aula, one of the most celebrated spaces on campus and a masterpiece of Danish modernism. Designed as the university’s ceremonial hall, the Aula is renowned for its refined architectural language, generous proportions, carefully framed vistas, and its integration within the broader modernist campus ensemble and surrounding landscape.


Accessibility

All the university buildings are fully accessible and equipped for wheelchair users and people with physical disabilities. All official homepages are fully accessible for visually impaired people. You can use the app AU Find for finding any university location.



Find Aarhus University's Building Map here 

Building units can also be located by downloading the AU Find app on your smartphone


Aarhus University Campus

In harmonious interplay with the rolling hills and tranquil lakes of the University Park (designed by landscape architect C.Th. Sørensen), the striking yellow-brick buildings initially designed by Kay Fisker, CF Møller and Povl Stegmann (and later, by CF Møller), create an inspiring and vibrant setting for study and social and cultural activities that welcome staff, students and town residents alike. The campus is located in the heart of Aarhus, Denmark’s second-largest city, just minutes from the lively pulse of the historic city centre. In addition to the main campus in Aarhus, the university has seventeen satellite locations, including three unique research stations in Greenland.

When the Danish Ministry of Culture published its Canon of Danish Art and Culture in 2007, Aarhus University’s buildings and the University Park in Aarhus were listed among the twelve most important architectural icons in Denmark.