Former residents include architect Michael Gottlieb Bindesbøll, poet Henrik Hertz, painter Heinrich Hansen and politician Carl Theodor Zahle.
80 in Frimand's Quarter and was owned by klein smith Jens Pedersen at that time.
[2] Lorenz Paulsen, a bookseller, resided on the third floor with his wife Marie née Friis, their five children, one lodger and two maids.
[6] Rasmus Hansen and his wife Dorthea née Larsen resided in the basement with their two children (aged three and five) and a maid.
She herself resided on the first floor with her two daughters (aged 15 and 20), her sister Pauline Dorthea Ahrentzen and two maids.
Ole's wife was the daughter of the wealthy wine merchant and patron of the arts, Christian Waagepetersen.
[12] Vilhelm Jørgen Ursin (1815–1871), a master bookbinder, resided on the ground floor with his wife Eleonora Henriette Ussin and three employees/servants.
[13] Holger Rosenstand (1814–1868), an unmarried grocer (urtekræmmer), resided in the basement with his apprentice Hans Karl Christian Steen.
[16] Georg Ludvig Conrad Kjeldsen, a bookseller and librarian, resided on the first floor with his wife Wilhelmine Augusta Kjeldsen née Mortlau, their two children (aged eight and twenty), 24-year-old jurist Philip Rosenstand [da] (who would later serve as mayor of Helsingør), 12-year-old school boy Carls Jørgen Aldo Gyntelberg Rasmussen and a maid.
[17] Carl Johan Ludvig Pingel, an employee (handelsbetjent) of grocer (urtekræmmer) C. S. J. Carlsen, resided in the basement with his apprentice Jacob Wiliam Thorvald Petersen and a servant.
[19] Skindergade 21 is a three-winged complex constructed in brick with four storeys over a walk-out basement.
The transition to undressed red brick of the upper floors is marked by a belt course with a white-painted relief frieze and there is a modillionned cornice below the roof.
The main entrance in the bay furthest to the left (east) is topped by a large transom window with coloured glass.
The roof ridge is pierced by a chimney and it features three dormer windows towards the street.
These secondary wings have a monopitched red tile roof pierced by a substantial kitchen chimney.