He went with a somewhat outdated Neoclassical style, undoubtedly to make the building blend in with Christian Frederik Hansen's Trøstens Boliger, Church of Our Lady and Metropolitan School on three adjacent sites.
[2] In 1837 the three small fire sites were acquired by the master mason Thomas Blom and merged into a single property.
[5] Peder Blicher (1784-1864), a former farmer, resided in one of the first-floor apartments with his wife Dorthea Kirstine (née Kornbech), their 24-year-old daughter Meta Lovise Blicher, his mother-in-law Lovise Friis (née Haagensen, widow of captain Jens Nielsen Jornbech (died 1796, and merchant Hans Friis)), two lodgers (students) and one maid.
[6] Christian Ramus [da] (1806-1856), a professor of mathematics at the University of Copenhagen, resided in the other first-floor apartment with his wife Sophie Lovise Charlotte Ramus (née Fistane), their two children (aged one and three), his sister-in-law Christiane Margrethe Fistaine and two maids.
[7] Tage Algreen-Ussing [da], a judge in Lands Over samt Hof og Stadsretten, resided in one of the second-floor apartments with his wife Frederikke Ottine Ussing (née Suenson), their four children (aged one to 10) and two maids.
[9] Charlotte Amalie Høegh, a widow with means, resided in one of the third-floor apartments with one maid.
[10] Magnus Urbanus Synnestvedt (1784-1843), inspector of Copenhagen Water Services, resided in the other third-floor apartment with his four children (aged 16 to 26) and two maids.
[11] Peer Nielsen, proprietor of a tavern in the basement, resided in the associated dwelling with his wife Mariane Christensen and one servant.
[12] Cristen Empecher (1808-1871), a master shoemaker, resided in the other half of the basement with his wife Julie Kirstline, their two-year-old daughter Constance Caroline Marie Empechse, his mother-in-law Catrine Friis and two shoemakers (employees).
[17] Lars Christian Larsen [da] (1813-1873), a lawyer, resided on the second floor with his wife Luise Christine (née Helweg), their three children (aged two to five) and two maids.
He now lived there with his new wife Martine Amalie Nancy (née Hartmann), their three children (aged one to 11) and one shoemaker (employee).
[14] In 1855, five years prior to her death, Ingeborg Blom sold the property to restaurateur Christian Jørgensen.
He lived there with his wife Anna Christine Jørgensen (née Reuther), two of their children (aged 19 and 29), four servants and the lodger Ludvig Alexander Rømeling Stricker.
A fifth son, Christian Helweg-Larsen, born in October of the same year, would later serve as the last Governor-General of the Danish West Indies.
[31][32][33] Markus Jens Ludvig Lange, a garmer, resided on the third floor to the left with a housekeeper and a maid.
[34] Christian Hedegaard, a junk dealer, resided in the basement with his wife Charlotte Frederikke (née Poulsen) and their three children (aged 18 to 21).
Thomas Blom had followed Caspar Frederik Harsdorff's evening programmes for craftsmen at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts.
Skindergade 32 does, however, stand out from Blom's other buildings as being more influenced by Christian Frederik Hansen's Classicism than Harsdordd's lighter Neoclassicism.
The plastered facade is on the ground floor and an exposed part of the basement is finished with shadow joints.
The upper part of the facade is finished with a sill course below the first-floor windows and a modillioned cornice.
The second-floor corner window is accented with sandstone framing as well as a hood mould supported by corbels.