Cracking the code to making Danish friends

<p>Over a trendy pot of chia-porridge at Gr&oslash;d, the world&rsquo;s first porridge-only restaurant, Brock Willis shares his experience of relocating to Denmark.</p> <p>&ldquo;I was mostly interested in the culture and lifestyle,&rdquo; Willis explained. &ldquo;Since I moved here I can see why it&rsquo;s ranked as such a happy place &mdash; everything is quite perfect and Copenhagen is a very easy city to live in.&rdquo;</p> <p>Willis moved from Perth, Australia to Copenhagen seven months ago and chose the Danish capital because of all the positive stories he had read, and heard, over the years. And he&rsquo;s far from alone in making the move. According to Copenhagen City Council, 36,000 foreign nationals moved to Copenhagen in 2015, the majority from USA, Italy and Germany. Numbers from Danmarks Statistik show that the number of foreign residents in Denmark increased a massive 57 percent between 2008 and 2016, to 468,000 &mdash; around eight percent of the total population.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/@gabrieledellisanti/cracking-the-code-to-making-danish-friends-beaef64e76a6"><strong>Visit Now</strong></a></p>
Tags: Danish Friends