Originally tenement houses, it was later converted into the city home of count Frederik Christian Danneskiold-Samsøe.
In a letter to the king dated 7 December 1753, Gundersen applied for permission to build a brewery at the site.
Alternatively, he offered to build a rectory at the site if the king would appoint his son to pastor at the new Frederick's Church that was planned in the area.
The application for permission to open a brewery was rejected on 25 February 1865 and the request of a priesthood for his son seems to have simply been ignored.
Lund, who also owned a property in Pilestræde, resided with his family in one of the apartments in the ground floor of the cross wing.
On 17 December 1763, Lund sold the property to Postmaster-General Frederik Christian Danneskiold-Samsøe (1722-1778) who immediately converted it into a suitable townhouse.
Danneskiold-Samsøe resided on the first and second floors, the attic contained the maids' rooms and the kitchen was located in the basement.
His widow kept the house in Amaliegade for a couple of years but sold it to Lorentz Angel Meincke on 23 March 1782 for 16,000 Danish rigsdaler.
Rothe sold the property to merchant Johan Gregorius Veith before the renovation had been completed in 1809 but with a ten-year lease on some of the rooms.
Johan Gunder Adler, Crown Prince Christian Frederik's cabinet secretary, resided in the apartment on the second floor from 1831.
He had previously been the owner of several prominent properties such as the Dehn Mansion in Bredgade (1842), Hellerupgård in Hellerup and the Peschier House in Holmens Kanal.
Ferdinand Victor Rottbøll, the owner of Holbæk Ladegård, resided in the apartment on the ground floor from 1854 to 1858.
Nicolai Ulrich Fugl, the later bank manager of Privatbanken, lived in the apartment on the second floor with his wife and eight children from 1854 to 1862.
Diderich Cappelen, the owner of Hollen Iron Works in Norway, lived in the apartment on the first floor from 1858.
Amaliegade 13 was then sold in auction on 7 July to August Konow, a merchant from Bergen, whose wife had died in 1856.