Brøndumgård is a Neoclassical town mansion from 1804 situated at Store Kongensgade 110 in central Copenhagen, Denmark.
Changing breweries or distilleries were from the beginning of the 18th century until 1918 operated on the rear of the property.
[1] The property was later acquired by the businessman and landowner Jens Laurids Barfred (1756-1823).
He initially operated the property in Store Kongensgade as a brewery specializing in bavarian beer.
Brøndum was at the time of the 1845 census residing in the building as a widower with his seven children.
On Rasmus William Brøndum's death in 1874, Store Kongensgade 110 was sold in public auction to Aage Borchhorst.
Thorvald Krak, Copenhagen's city engineer, was a resident in one of the apartments in 1874–75.
[14] The Neoclassical building fronting the street was probably designed by one of the students of Caspar Frederik Harsdorff.
The facade has a three-bay median risalit and two wide single-bay corner resilits.
The two upper storeys of the median risalit is decorated with four Giant order Ionic pilasters with triglyphs carrying a triangular pediment.
The roof is clad with black tiles and features four dormer windows, two on each side of the median risalit.
A door in the south wall of the gateway provides access to the building's main staircase.
The apartment on the second floor features a number of original ornamental details, including a mural of a romantic landscape with a ruin.