Strandgade 24

35B was acquired by Charles August Selby, an Englishman who had settled in Copenhagen in 1753 and set up his own trading company in 1777.

Niels Brock Hansen (1765-1818), a merchant (grosserer), resided in the building with his wife Lene Maria Hansen (née Sommerfeldt, 1779–1847), their six children (aged one to nine), four office clerks, a coachman, a caretaker, a maid, a wet nurse and a female cook.

Hansen, the proprietor of a tavern in the basement, resided in the associated dwelling with a foster child, three lodgers and two maids.

Georg Wilhelm Albert Heinving's household on the ground floor accounted for 18 of the residents.

[9] Johan Christian v Østen was now residing on the first floor with the housekeeper Frederikke Henriette Evert and one maid.

[10] Christian Harboe, a civil servant in the Ministry of Defence with the title of justitsråd, resided on the second floor with his wife Ida Amalie Charlotte Harboe (née Hahn), their three sons (aged 16 to 18) and one maid.

The architects H. Christiansen and Jens Ladegaard undertook a renovation of the building in 1988–1989 which received an award from the City of Copenhagen.

The rounded pediment matches the similar feature on the Danish Asia Company's former headquarters on the other side of the street.

No. 35 C seen in a detail from Christian Gedde's map of Christianshavn Quarter, 1757
The building seen on C. Heinricy's membership target from the Royal Danish Shooting Society , 1853
Strandgade 24.