Porcelænshaven in the Frederiksberg district of Copenhagen, Denmark, is the former premises of the Royal Porcelain Manufactury, an industrial complex dating from the 1880s which was converted into a mixed-use neighbourhood in the 2000s.
The company E. Nobel constructed a tobacco factory at the site.in 1860[1] but Aluminia acquired the site in 1868 to build a new faience manufactury which opened in 1870.
In 1882, Aluminia purchased the Royal Porcelain Factory which was based in Købmagergade but in 1884 joined its new owner at their site in Frederiksberg.
Sjælsø Group purchased the Frederiksberg site in 2002 when Royal Copenhagen first made the decision to move.
Since its foundation in 1882, many trees have been gifted and planted by prominent foreign guests during their visits to the porcelain facility.
Located next to the green space at the street corner, one of the old chimneys now serve as a very visible landmark in the area.
Copenhagen Business School occupies 19,000 square metres in the southern part of the area, overlooking Frederiksberg Gardens, as well as 8,000 square metres of underground parking[6] A low, partly underground former oven hall on Søndre Fasanvej serves as a vestibule to a complex of former factory buildings.