65 in St. Ann's West Quarter (Sankt Annæ Vester Kvarter), owned by sailmaker Jens Ravn, In the new cadastre of 1756, it was listed as No.
[2] In 1767 the property was acquired by an affluent wine bottler and merchant, Henrik Bolten, who replaced it with the current building in 1771.
In 1783 he was ennobled with the title of Baron von Bolten but in 1786 he went bankrupt and had to spend the last four years of his life as a tenant in the attic.
resided in the other apartment with his 21-uear-old daughter Louise Knuth, the lady's companions Dorthea Cecilie Rabert and Henriette Charlotte Lamotte, kammerjomfru Barbara Brynnincke, a housekeeper, two maids, two male servants and a stableman.
[7] John von Brackte, a traveller from the Danish West Indies, resided on the first floor with his 25-year-old daughter, three male servants and two maids.
He lived there with Marie Elisabeth Hillerup (1794-1861), their five children (aged 10 to 22), a governess, two male servants and three maids.
In 1997 the nightclub NASA opened on the top floor of the building and for a decade it remained one of Copenhagen's leading venues for the jetset.