It is one of a substantial number of similar apartment buildings constructed by the master masons Philip Lange and Lauritz Thrane as part of the rebuilding of the city following the Copenhagen Fire of 1795.
[4] In 1776–1788, he served as superintendent ("Berg Hauptmand") at the Kongsberg Mine in Norway with responsibility for iron smelting and hammering.
Ole Hansen, a courier employed by Bergverket in Kongsberg, lived there with his wife, two children and two lodgers.
[5] Joseph Isack Una, a Jewish merchant, lived there with his wife, two children, two more relatives and a maid.
[7] The now 74-year-old widow Christiane Mulvad was residing in one of the ground floor apartments with the son Hans and a maid.
Peter Georg Haas (c. 1798–1855), a first lieutenant at the Royal Life Guards, resided with his wife, their four children and two maids in one of the apartments on the first floor.
Israel Salomon, a glass merchant, lived with his wife Amalie, their three children and a maid in one of the apartments on the second floor.
Hanne Elise Emilie Petersen (née Andersen), a 41-year-old widow, resided on the first floor with her three children (aged 11 to 22), a 12-year-old foster son and one maid.
August Christian Hansen, a merchant (urtekræmmer), resided in the basement with the floor clerk Joachim Hannis Reith and one maid.
The facade on Naboløs is crowned by a single-bay gabled wall dormer which was originally the site of a pulley.