Allégade

The streetscape is, in spite of the central location, characterized by houses that are pulled back from the street with front gardens behind white fences.

Along the northernmost part of the street, on its west side, is a narrow garden complex, Digterlunden (literally "Poet's Grove") with a statue of Holger Drachmann.

After the war, the Dutch community returned to the area but, struck with deep poverty, a new church was not completed until 1681 After the turn of the century, the area changed dramatically when King Frederick IV built Frederiksberg Palace on a nearby hilltop.

It is in one storey and a Mansard roof and has polygonal projections from the sides and Baroque details on the gables.

22 was built by Chief Surveyor Johan Jørgen Berner after he had purchased two of the original farms and merged them into one property.

[8][9] Digterlunden ("Poets' Grove) is a narrow, rectangular garden complex at the northern end of Allégade, on its west side, just south of the Town Hall Square.

The two other busts, depicting Meïr Aron Goldschmidt and Hans Vilhelm Kaalund respectively, both face the traffic.

A Sundag in Allégade , illustration from Illustreret Tidende (1861)
Allégade in circa 1890
A view down Hollændergade from Allégade
Riises Landsted, now Danish Revue Museum
Lorry
The Holger Drachmann statue at the north end of Allégade, facing Town Hall Square