Grundtvigsvej

The land at the site was in the first half of the 19th century owned by an estate called Christianshvile.

He adapted the main building in around 1850 and sold most of the land off in lots prior to his death in 1852.

[1] One of the first buildings in the street was a house built for xylographer Axel Kittendorff to designs by Johan Daniel Herholdt in 1852 (now demolished).

Bianco Lunos Sideallé was in 1879 renamed Grundtvigsvej in commemoration of Grundtvig who had died a couple of years earlier.

During the occupation of Denmark in World War II, on 19 September 1943, the company was subject to sabotage by members of the BOPA resistance movement.

Frederiksberg metro station is located close to the western end of the street.

Christianshvile in 1861
Grundtvigsvej at Ceresvej, looking west
Grundtvigsvej seen from Bülowsvej, 1899
No. 14: Gimle