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Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Öskjuhlíð Hill, 105 Reykjavík, Iceland
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Perlan History: Tanks, Dome, and Reykjavík’s Evolution

How Perlan transformed from six hot-water tanks into a museum: timeline, design ideas, and Reykjavík’s energy story.

2/7/2026
15 min read
Historical aerial view of Perlan site with tank structures

Perlan’s origin tracks Reykjavík’s relationship with geothermal energy and civic imagination.

Historic Perlan Aerial

Extended Timeline

  • 1970s: Water storage tanks on Öskjuhlíð
  • Late 1980s: Vision of a glass dome connecting tanks
  • 1990s: Civic ambitions; Perlan as an emerging symbol
  • 2000s: Renewed purpose as a public space
  • 2010s–present: Museum, deck, restaurant — a civic landmark

Architecture Notes

  • Six tanks + one dome
  • Circular logic: form follows function
  • Symbol: Reykjavík’s scientific heart
  • Materials: Glass and steel balancing transparency and strength

The design signals Iceland’s balance between nature and knowledge.

Energy & City Life

  • Geothermal networks underpin daily comfort
  • Tanks as historical infrastructure
  • Museum as a bridge between past utility and present culture

Further Reading

  • Geothermal development in Iceland [^source]

[^source]: For deeper background, see local energy histories and archives.

About the Author

Iceland Travel Expert

Iceland Travel Expert

I put this guide together to make your Perlan visit easy, insightful, and full of quiet wow‑moments — the kind Iceland gives freely when you pause to look.

Tags

Perlan
History
Architecture
Reykjavík
Energy

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