Jægersborg Allé

It runs from Strandvejen in the southeast to a junction just east of Jægersborg railway station in the northwest.

The first leg of the road passes through Charlottenlund Forest, and it later follows the north boundary of Bernstorff Park.

Jægersborg Allé was built on the orders of King Christian V by farmers from the parish of Gentofte.

Bernstorffvej was constructed in 1770, linking the Royal Frederiksborg Road with Bernstorff House and Jægersborg Allé.

Its location next to the still existing restaurant Ved Stalden ("At the Stables") meant that horses were always present at the site in the event of fire.

Olesen & Co., a manufacturer and distributor of ingredients for the animal feed, food and pharma industries, is based at No.

[6] A Femvejen, a roundabout where Jægersborg Allé, Bernstorffsvej, Ordrupvej and two others roads meet, is a memorial to King Christian IX and Queen Louise.

The memorial was designed by the architect Andreas Vlemmesen and executed by the sculptor Anders Bundgaard.

[7] Outside Jægersborg Allé 184 is a stone commemorating Jørgen Haagen Schmith, better known under the codename Citronen (Danish for the Lemon), a prominent member of the Danish resistance movement during World War II, who was killed at the site early in the morning on 15 October 1944.

Jægersborg Allé in the first half of the 19th century
Jægersborg Allé after the turn of the century
No. 185-229; Alle husene