The two buildings fronting the street were jointly listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1918. Notable former residents include author Knud Lyne Rahbek, politicians Niels Rosenkrantz and Johan Sigismund von Møsting, landscape painter Georg Emil Libert, businessman Alfred Hage and actor Arthur Andersen.
[1] The northern of the two buildings fronting the street was constructed with three storeys in 1782 for justice councillor Jacob Rahbek (1728–1795).
[2] Poul Rosenørn (1756–1829), another high-ranking customs officer (deputeret i General Toldkammeret), resided in the building with his son, a housekeeper, a male servant and a maid.
[3] Peder Rosenstand Giuske, a prosecutor general (overgeneralauditør) at the Supreme Court and director ad censor of the Royal Danish Theatre, resided in the building with his wife Frideriche Amalia Koor, their two children (aged four and six), two office clerks, a housekeeper, a female cook and two maids.
[7] His son, Georg Severin Katerød (1672–1743), a pharmacist, would later found the second pharmacy in Aalborg, where he is commemorated with a well-known fountain.
[10] The eldest of the two sons, Lorentz Fribert (1781–1714), would later purchase the manor house Annebjerggaard in Odsherred, but died just four years later.
Johan Ludwig Friederich Zinn, his cousin, who was licensed as a wine merchant, owned the Danneskiold-Laurvig Mansion on Store Kongensgade from 1799 to 1810.
The property was owned at the time by Peter Wilhelm Eckert, a cartwright and captain in the Fire Corps, from 1821 to 1839 with predicate of Court Wheelwright,[11] whose carriage workshop was also located at the site.
Peter Wilhelm Eckert's father Hendrich Ekkert had held the predicate of Court Wheelwright from 1801 to 1819.
Peter Vilhelm Eckert resided on the ground floor of the northern front wing (Rahbek's building) with his wife Marie Sophie Kyhl and two maids.
[15] Edle Matilde Kofoed, the 64-year-old widow of a naval commander, resided on the second floor with her niece Inger Marie Krausen and two maids.
[16] Marius Christian Ager, one of Princess Juliane's lackeys, resided on the third floor with four unmarried children (aged 17 to 25), one lodger and one maid.
[22] Peter Schauenborg, a courier, resided on the first floor of the northern side wing with his wife Juliane Marie Rasmussen and their three children (aged 18 to 24).
Teui Jenni Cooper Strandgaard, a captain from the Danish West Indies, was now residing in the apartment on the first floor with his wife Georgia Louise Elisa Strandgaard, their four children (aged 10 to 18), the lady's companion Sophie Brown, two maids and a black servant.
[27] Johan Horca, a royal cook (kongelig mundkok), resided on the ground floor of the southern front wing with his wife Birgitte Hedevig (née Bruun), their five-year-old daughter, his 65-year-old mother and one maid.
[28] Christian Holger Thomas von Eyben, a former captain in the Queen's Life Regiment, resided on the first floor of the southern front wing with his wife Charlotte Cronhelm, their two daughters (aged seven and 12) and two maids.
They had now been joined by a master painter, Lars Christian Lunde, on the ground floor of the southern side wing.
The three central bays are up to the first floor windows accented with a slightly projecting median risalit finished with shadow joints.