Grøbrødretorv 4 is a mid 18th-century residential property situated on the east side of Gråbrødretorv in the Old Town of Copenhagen, Denmark.
[2] Michael Green, a goldsmith, resided in the building with his wife Birgithe Marie Olsens, their three children (aged three to eight) and two apprentices.
[7] Christian jensen Weyle, a beer vendor (øltapper) and shoemaker, resided in the building with his wife Marie Jacobs Datter and three lodgers.
[8] Jens Jespersen, a beer vendor (øltapper) and workman, resided in the building with his wife Abigael Niels Datter and their two children (aged 3 and 10).
[9] Daniel Henrich Bitterman, a shoemaker, resided in the building with his wife Anna Magrethe Boysen and their two children.
[10] Erland Nielsen Malm, a tailor, resided in the building with his wife Lovise Cathrine Willads, their four children (aged three to 12) and one lodger.
[11] Johan Johansen Boye, another tailor, resided in the building with his wife Dorthe Anders Datter and their two children (aged 21 and 26).
Jacob Frederik Milo, a book-binder, resided with his wife, four children, anephew, two employees (one of them an apprentice) and a maid in one of the ground floor apartments.
[22] Andreas Christian Dahlgreen, a manufacturer of pewterware, resided in the other ground floor apartment with his two daughters (aged one and five), an apprentice and two maids.
[24] Johan Peter Jelling, a book binder, was residing with his wife Jacobine Bentine Rosenkrantz in the other first floor apartment.
[25] Cathrine Margrethe Belman, a 70-year-old widow midwife, resided with her unmarried daughter and a maid on the second floor.
[30] Johan Thomas Lorentz (no mention of occupation) and his wife Karen Malene Hjort was also residing in the basement.
[33] Philip Abraham Levi, a Jewish trader, resided in the building with his wife Hanna Heimans Datter and their two children (aged 25 and 29).
Gringer moved to an apartment at Bianco Lunos Allé 10 (fourth floor) when the couple divorced in 1963.
[40] Gråbrødretorv 4 is a three-winged complex, surrounding three sides of a central courtyard, constructed with a masonry front towards the street but apart from that with timber framing.
The slightly projecting four-bay median risalit is tipped by a through-going gabled wall dormer with cornice returns and an oval oculus.
The main entrance in the fourth bay from the left is accessed via a short flight of sandstone steps.