It was like most of the other buildings in the street constructed as part of the rebuilding of the city following the Copenhagen Fire of 1795.
The owner resided in the building with his wife Idea Helena Poulsen, their two-year-old daughter Mette Kirstine Lyngaard, a distillery worker, two maids and two lodgers (both students).
[2] Joseph Raphael (no profession mentioned) and Rose Una, a Jewish couple, resided in the building with their two daughters (aged 10 and 12) and two maids.
[3] Sophie Cantor (née Heiman), a widow in her 60s, resided in the building with four of her children (aged 21 to 26).
[4] Maar Rønne, a funeral coachman, resided in the building with his wife Anne Paiker, their two children (aged 10 and 11) and one lodger.
[5] Lars Rasmussen, a workman, resided in the building with his wife Sidse Bends Datter and one lodger.
The present building on the site was constructed in 1796 by master mason Lauritz Thrane for distiller Jeppe Hans Lijndgaard.
Jeppe and Ida Lijndgaard resided in the building with their now three children (aged five to 15), one distillery worker and one maid.
[9] Pincus Hertz, a Jewish merchant, resided in the building with his wife Henriette Cantor and their two children (aged 16 and 21).
[14] Helene Chatrine Fenger, a widow, resided on the second floor with her daughter Hertha Fenger, her sister Sara Hellesen, her granddaughter Betzy Olrik, one maid and the lodger Frederikke Bødtker (widow of an overkrigskommissær).
Carl Frederik Rievers (1824-1890), a jurist in the Ministry of Financial Affairs, resided on the first floor with his wife Thora Nielsine Gaverstine Lützen, their four children (aged one to six), a female tutor and a maid.
Isaac Gottcgalk Salomon, a book printer, resided on the second floor with his wife Sara (née Pethinger), their four daughters (aged 11 to 24).
A green-painted gate topped by an arched transom window is located in the two bays furthest to the left.