He lived there with his wife Clara Sophie Hedemann (née Gosch), their 15-year-old foster daughter Carl August Hedemann-Gade, husjomfru Mathea Susanne Rick, office clerk Christian Heinrich Hermann Meyer, six sugar refinery workers, four male servants and two maids.
64A was (at some point) acquired by Frederik Christian Holsten-Lehn-Charisius (1796-1999) He was the son of admiral Hans Holsten and Regitze Sophie Kaas (af Mur).
Hans Baron Holsten, an admiral in the Royal Danish Navy, resided on the first floor with naval lieutenant in the 5th Vatallion G. F. Kiær, three male servants and three maids.
[8] Peter Wilhelm Tegner, a captain in the Royal Danish Navy, resided on the third floor with his wife Johanne Catrine Cecilie Tegner, their seven children (aged two to 23), his sister-in-law Petronelle Marie Hansen and two maids.
[9] Camillus Mullerts, a chief physician in the Royal Danish Nacy, resided on the ground floor with his wife Hedevig Antoinette Mullerts, their eight children (aged one to 18), three maids and law student Adam Frederik Moltke.
[10] Ferdinand Hansen, a concierge, resided in the basement with his wife Emilie Wilhellemine Bigun and their four-year-old daughter.
[16] In 1863, Frederik Christian Holsten-Lehn-Charisius sold the property to Ove Sehestedt-Juul- The new owner was married to his niece Emilie Holstein.
The painter Otto Bache resided in an apartment in the rear wing from 1873 to 1882 and again from 1887 to 1888.
[17] Otto Erichsen and Jacob Johan Simonsen opened a dairy shop in the building in 1878.
Store Kongensgade consists of four storeys over a raised cellar and is seven bays wide.
An antemion frieze—with alternating palmette and lotus flower decorations growing from a nest of achantus leaves—runs under the windows on the first floor and the facade is finished by a dentillated cornice.
The roof is clad with black tiles and features four dormer windows towards the street.
A gateway topped by a fanlight with palmette decorations in the right-hand side of the building opens to a narrow courtyard.
[1] Store Kongensgade 77 is today home to the law firms Nyborg & Rørdam as well as Advokatanpartsselskabet Af 30.12.1993 with the individually practicing lawyers Hanne Rahbæk, Henriette La Cour, Henrik Fürstenberg, Jakob Grøndahl, Karin Absalonsen and Maryla Rytter Wroblewski.