- We want to attract more users to the district.

Perhaps above all children, women at this stage who we know contribute to increased security in the city, says landscape architect Andrée Olsson Lilja.

Since December, there have been eight small works of art on display: a tapir, a thoughtful woman or a doll's cupboard in the form of a shelter.

A jury has selected the eight works of art that are located at different heights in the urban landscape.

Some are several meters up on a wall or buried in a peephole in the ground.



- I think it's great and it's a perfect way for families with children to be able to see the city, that the children can look down, said visitor Elin Pörtfors who visited Helsingborg during the weekend.

Another work of art will appear soon, and if the project is appreciated, there may be more.

So far, however, it remains a treasure hunt.

- At the moment it should be a bit surprising so we have not posted any information or guide yet but you have to go and look, said Andrée Olsson Lilja.