The Öresund bridge, which links Denmark and Sweden, is commemorating 25 years since it opened as one of Europe’s most recognisable transportation icons. However, despite its significant influence on regional commerce, difficulties still exist. Standing on a platform within Malmö’s red-brick, 19th-century train station is 28-year-old Oskar Damkjaer.
He resides in Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, and takes the high-speed 40-minute train twice a week to travel to Sweden’s third-largest city, crossing the Öresund bridge, which allows him to fit part of his working hours into the trip.
The software developer at Neo4j, a database business started in Sweden, adds, “People think that it’s a really big thing to commute to another country.” “I think it’s quite convenient. Laurine Deschamps is seated at her desk at the modern, minimalist headquarters of Danish game developer IO Interactive over the river in Copenhagen.
After landing a position at IO Interactive’s Copenhagen headquarters, where she commutes four times a week, she chose to remain in Malmö, where she had previously worked for a Swedish gaming firm. Some people would pick [to live in] Copenhagen, to be in a bustling, capital city with lots of activities,” the global brand manager explains.
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