Former residents include the composer Johan Christian Gebauer and the portrait painter Geskel Saloman.
He lived there with his wife Kirstine Maria and a poor six-year-old girl to whom they had opened their home.
[3] The third household consisted of the 30-year-old widow Anna Margretha Henrichsen, her four-year-old daughter Karen and three lodgers.
[4] The last household consisted of labourer Peder Jensen, his wife Anna Christine, the poor four-year-old boy Jens Hansen, the 19-year-old student Herman Bagesen and the 17-year-old junior officer in Prince Frederikch's Regiment Gerhard Feldtmand.
[5] The property was around the turn of the century acquired by master builder Lauritz Laurberg Thrane.
[7] Thomas Petersen, a customs official, resided on the ground floor with his wife Anne Sophie née Reuhs and their four children (aged 10–17).
The law student Frederik Emanuel Ramus [da], who would later become a high-ranking civil servant, was now living in the sister's apartment as a lodger.ent.
[14] The master joiner Peter Christian Schmidt and his wife Karen née Christensen were also still occupying one of the ground floor apartments.
[15] Johan Ludvig Hammerich, a "former grocer" (todligere urtekræmmer), resided with his wife Sophie Frederikke née Holm and their four children (aged 8 to 12) in the other first floor apartment.
The plastered, white-painted facade is finished by a belt course above the ground floor and a simple cornice below the roof.
The main entrance in the centre of the central bay towards Rosenborggade is raised a few steps from street level, inset and topped by a transom window.