Hustmeyer resided in the building with his wife Ane Dorethea Goubmeyer, their two children (aged five and seven), a bookkeeper, a clerk, an apprentice, two maids, a caretaker, a lodger and a coachman.
[3] Ch.Haraldsen, a tea merchant, resided in the basement with his wife Cath Olsen Walloe, their four children (aged one to six) and one maid.
Quist was one of a handful of master builders who obtained a near monopoly on the rebuilding of the city after the fire.
Gustmeyer and his wife resided in the building with their two children (aged 19 and 20), and the senior clerk Bengt Julius Lingblom.
[10] Carl Wigandt Falbe, a judge in Hof- og Stadsretten, resided in the building with his wifem a servant.
Mosses Wessely Junior, a grocer (urtekræmmer), a Jewish merchant, resided in the building with his wife Sikke Wallick and their five children.
Gustmeyer lost the family fortune during the economic crisis that resulted from Denmark's involvement in the Napoleonic Wars.
Anders Ancker, a textile wholesale merchant, resided with his son, three employees, three apprentices and three servants on the ground floor.
[13] Balthasar Münter (1797–1867), provost of Holmens Church, resided on the second floor with his wife, two daughters and three maids.
[14] Ole Christian Borgen, a merchant, resided with his wife, their five children, his mother-in-law, an employee and two maids on the third floor.
Sally Friedlænders Papirhandel og Kortforlag, a stationery business and publisher of art prints and postcards, was also based in the building from circa 1870.
The firm had been taken over in 1860 by Ditmer Firmaet in partnership with the namesake founder's son Vilhelm Friedlænder.
The entire property was refurbished by royal building inspector David Bretton-Meyer for the consultancy McKinsey & Company in 1985–1986.