Linderud

By the late eighteenth century, the manor was a part of a property which included vast amounts of forest, some timber industrial sites and about 350 farms.

[1] Lauritzen's ancestor Mogens Larsen Monsen passed it down to his son-in-law Haagen Mathiesen[1] in 1802.

[5] Jørgen Mathiesen set up the Linderud Foundation in 1954, which now owns the main building of the manor as well as the surrounding park.

[6] The farmland surrounding Linderud manor was largely built in the 1950s and 1960s, eventually forming an urban neighborhood.

It actually consists of four hills, constructed in 1931, 1965 and 1995, the largest with a calculation point of seventy metres.

Overview of Linderud and the adjacent neighborhood Veitvet .
Linderud Manor, main building and the upper part of the garden
Linderud shopping mall.
Linderud station.