Søllerød is a suburban district of Rudersdal Municipality in the northern outskirts of Copenhagen, Denmark.
It merged with the neighbouring village of Øverød to the north and the modern district of Holte to the southwest in the middle of the 20th century and now forms part of the Greater Copenhagen area.
[3] The villagers originally got their water supply from Søllerød Lake or for superior quality from Suhm's Spring in Øverød.
In 1867, the owners of Søllerødgaard, Fogedgården, Carlsminde and Mothsgården constructed a new public water well next to the village pond.
The Medieval church was a small flat-roofed structure built in chalk ashlar from Stevns Klint.
The smaller one, attached to the porch, is known as Københavnerlogen, a name that dates from the time when the church was often frequented by visitors from Copenhagen on Sundays.
Mothsgården was from the 1680s until 1711 owned by Mathias Moth, who was Minister of Interior Affairs and the brother of Christian V's official mistress.
The property features a section of the original rough iron fence from the Odd Fellows Mansion in Bredgade, Copenhagen, which was dismantled when the house was expanded and converted into a concert venue in 1884.