It later belonged to the Water Authority and was closed to the public by a locked gate at each end.
[1] The first houses along the path were built when the so-called demarcation line which had enforced a no-built zone outside the city's fortification ring was moved from Jagtvej to the western margin of the lakes in the 1852.
[2] One of them (Sortedam Dossering 37) belonged to pioneering precision mechanic Edvard Jünger who ran his company from the basement.
It was taken over by Christopher Peter Jürgensen in 1869 and played a central part in the creation of Hansen's Writing Ball.
This introduced the current solution with a lower part directly on the lake separated from the Dossering by a grassy slope and a line of chestnut trees.
A residential block just north of Fredensgade was demolished in 1973 in connection with the later abandoned Søringen infrastructure project.
It has been decided to demolish the buildings and replace them with a combination of youth housing and a new senior citizens home.
The Modernist building on the corner with Østerbrogade was designed by Ib Lunding [da].
[8] A little further north, just south of Fredensgade, stands Søren Georg Jensen's sculpture Reclining Figure from the same year.
[9] On the other side of Fredensgade, just inside the small Fredens Park, stands the sculpture Gateway to Peace which was created by Hein Heinsen, Stig Brøgger and Mogens Møller in 1982.