Stelling House

[3] Poul Nicolai Christensen, a beer seller (øltapper), resided in the building with his wife Abiel Berthelsen, their three children (aged one to four) and one maid.

Niss Hansen, a new distiller, resided on the ground floor with his wife Anne Magrete (née Galhchøt?

Jacobine Müller, widow of a justitsråd, resided on the second floor with her daughter, Clara Sørina, and the 30-year-old visitor, Sophie Anker.

van der Aa Kühle's Lacquer Factory in Valby was acquired by the company.

It was replaced by Oonaco, another restaurant and café concept furnished with tables and chairs designed by Arne Jacobsen.

[9] Towards the end of the 1930s, influenced in part by Gunnar Asplund, Jacobsen moved from the white-plastered functionalism of his Bellavista developments to a more Nordic modern approach.

Indeed, built in a puritanically modernistic style, Stelling House complements the classicism of the surrounding buildings.

[10] The reinforced concrete structure is six stories tall, the top floor being slightly set back.

The two bottom stories are clad in green-painted steel plate while the upper part of the building is finished in grey tiling.

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Stelling House, Copenhagen