Private mornings and slow afternoons. Culture, art, sport.
Experiences for 1 to 6 people.








A half or full day built around what actually interests you — a neighbourhood, a theme, a mix of whatever you have in mind. We start with a short briefing call, and I plan from there. No template, no fixed route.
Copenhagen changed my life. I arrived and immediately fell in love with the city, the people. Just everything.
I have three children between 15 and 26 and live here with my youngest, my partner and our cocker spaniel Max.
Before moving to Copenhagen, I built and ran my own business in Germany. My background is in marketing and communications, and I’m also a certified Pilates teacher. But what I actually enjoy is showing people a city I love.
I go to galleries, concerts and cultural events and I never stop being surprised by how much this city has to offer. Denmark has a culture that’s worth understanding. The way people live, what they value, how they spend their time. I’d love to share this exciting world with you.
My favourite spots? Nordhavn for the water and the open sky. Værnedamsvej for a morning coffee and that quiet touch of Paris in the middle of Copenhagen.
I lead every tour personally, as a friend by your side, no umbrella, no microphone, but lots of culture, sport and fun.
So, where would you like to start?

Legal Notice (Impressum)
Magdalena Brablec
Sølvgade 95
1307 København, Denmark
Email: hej@seeyouincopenhagen.com
Instagram: @seeyouincopenhagen
Responsible for content: Magdalena Brablec
Frederiksstaden is Copenhagen's Rococo showpiece. We walk through it properly: past Amalienborg Palace, the Marble Church, and Nyboder — the naval quarters built in the 1630s. Then the streets most visitors don't find, a Danish picnic bag, and Kongens Have for lunch on the grass.
Three private visits: a Danish ceramics artist, a leather designer, and a graphic arts studio. Each in their own workspace, making things by hand. Between visits, a curated walk past Torvehallerne, the Lakes and the Kartoffelraekker.
In 1728, a fire destroyed nearly half of Copenhagen's medieval quarter. What survived: a handful of cobblestone lanes and the bones of a city that had been here since the 11th century. We walk those streets past the Round Tower, the old university square and Magstraede unchanged since the 1520s. We end with smørrebrød in a historic cellar.
We start at BLOX and walk through the city — past the National Museum, through the old streets of Strædet, along the canal to Gammel Strand. Then into a ceramics studio I know well. Not a tourist class, a working space. Two hours of hand-building: shaping, trimming, finishing. The piece is fired and sent to your home address.
Built by Christian IV after the Dutch model, Christianshavn feels different the moment you cross the bridge. We walk from the 1909 bathhouse past the German Baroque church, over Olafur Eliasson's Circle Bridge, through Holmen, and past the Royal Opera House. We end at 6.30 pm at a shared long table on the canal. With Nordic food and spontaneous conversation.
Fair warning: NRTHRN Strong is not a wellness format. The 50-minute class on the Nordic Trainer is a full-body workout. If you train regularly, you'll love it — if not, the Kastellet run is the better fit. Then an optional harbour dip and shower. We end our morning with a true local classic — BMO (bun with cheese) in a café with a view on the canal — and take a slow walk through Nordhavn.
We start at Kastellet, the old star fortress, while the city is still waking up. Past the Little Mermaid, along the waterfront, through Nyhavn before the tourists arrive. Inner-city lanes, a final lap around the Lakes. 5–7 km, at talking pace. We finish with a real Danish breakfast — BMO (bun with cheese) in a café with a stunning view of the Lakes.
Running clubs are part of Sunday morning here. The whole city runs together, unhurried, no stopwatch. We join one starting outside one of the city's best-known porridge cafes. 5–6 km around the Lakes, at talking pace. Warm porridge after, then a cool-down walk through Nørrebro: Jaegersborggade, Assistens Kirkegård, the streets most visitors never find.
Begin your morning at Ofelia Plads, the wooden deck right on the water, the Opera House across the harbour and Papirøen beside us. A 60-minute mat Pilates session in the open air: core work, breath, movement. No studio, no mirrors. Just the harbour, the light off the water, and the morning quiet in Copenhagen. Then BMO in a nearby café — a real Danish breakfast.
A half or full day built around what actually interests you — a neighbourhood, a theme, a mix of whatever you have in mind. We start with a short briefing call, and I plan from there. No template, no fixed route.