Otto Frello, who owned it from 1966 until his death, painted a trompe-l'œil mural of a door on the first floor.
The small corner property was listed in the new cadastre of 1756 as No 94 and belonged to Lars Bøgvadt at that time.
Ludolfine Frideriche Lillie, a tea and coffee merchant, resided in the building with her 11-year-old grandson Knud Magnus Steenberg.
[5] Peter Foersom and Hanne Cathrine Ebbesen, both of them actors at the Royal Danish Theatre, resided in the building with their two daughters (aged one and four).
copiist), resided on the ground floor with his wife Albertine Frederikke Møller and the 15-year-old Christiane Thunboe who was receiving private tutoring.
Carl Nicolai Buchleister and Henriette Lassen, a couple living on their means, resided in the other ground floor apartment with their three children (aged 10 to 15) and one maid.
Peder Wulff Ramus, an assistant in Danmarks Nationalbank, resided on the first floor with his wife Margrethe Dyrborg and a 21-year-old servant.
Louise Dorthea Dannefeldt, a 32-year-old unmarried needleworker, resided in the other first floor apartment with a maid and a lodger.
Georg Martin Halvor Schmidt, a captain on paid leave, resided in one of the second floor apartments with his wife Frederike Catharine, their two children and a 21-year-old student lodger.
Marie Walentin, a 33-year-old widow, resided in the other first floor apartment with her two-year-old daughter Selma Alende and one maid.
[12] The artist Otto Frello purchased the property in 1966 and members of his family owned and lived in it until 2016.
He also created other eclectic details, including a glazed niche in one of the bathrooms with coins and banknotes and a built-in clock.