Strandgade 30

Other notable former residents include the ship-owner, merchant and slave trader Jens Lind.

A doorway in a brick wall connects the narrow, central courtyard to that of Strandgade 28.

The building at Wildersgade 43 and the adjacent warehouse in the courtyard are also part of the heritage listing.

Its first owner was mayor of Christianshavn Mikkel Vive, who died before the building at what is now Strandgade 30 had been completed.

Haste, chief equipment master (overekvipagemester) at the Danish Asiatic Company, resided in another apartment with his wife Lovise Haste, their three children (aged one to three), one male servant, one maid, one wet nurse and one female cook.

[4] Hans Olsen, a workman, resided in another dwelling with his wife Johanne Kirstine Peders Datter.

Johan David Vogel resided in the building with his wife Echardine Lovise Vogel, their four children (aged two to eight), an office clerk, a brewer, a brewer's apprentice, a caretaker, a coachman, a female cook, a maid and a seamstress.

[11] Marie Kiølhede, a widow, resided in the basement with two foster sons (aged seven and 13) and three lodgers.

[13] Johan Peter Engholm, a master ship rigger, resided on the ground floor to the left with his wife Charlotte M. Hansen, their five children (aged two to 10), his mother Johan Christen Lintzmejer, his wife's sister Elise D. C. Hansen and one maid.

Herman Allesøe was now residing on the ground floor with his wife, two of their daughters, one male servant and one maid.

[18][19] Søren Laurits Obdrup, a medical doctor with his own clinic, was also resident on the ground floor.

The facade of the front wing is constructed in brick with bands of lime stone.

The pitched red tile roof is pierced by a tall chimney at the southwestern gable.

[1] The rear side of the front wing features a closed gallery with black-painted timber framing and plastered, yellow-painted infills on the first floor.

The plastered, yellow facade is also on the side of the yard finished by a white-painted cornice.

A short staircase leads up to a doorway in the bay closest to the main wing.

A brown-painted gate in the two bays furthest to the left (southwest) provides access to the courtyard.

The red tile pitched roof features five dormer windows towards the street.

The facade of the warehouse is crowned by a gabled wall dormer with a pulley beam.

[22] These include Ida Reading a Letter (1899), Sunbeams (190) and Interior with Young Woman Seen from the Back (1903–04).

His paintings from the apartment were showcased by the Ordrupgaard Art Museum in the exhibition Hjemme hos Hammershøi.

No. 39 seen on a detail from Christian Gedde's map of Christianshavn Quarter, 1757
Vilhelm Hammershøi in the yard of Strandgade 30 in 1907. Ida Hammershøi is sitting in the open window.
Strandgade 30 viewed from the yard with the northeastern side wing seen to the right and the southwestern side wing seen to the left
Wildersgade 43 viewed from the street
Wildersgade 43 viewed from the yard with the warehouse and a bit of the 20th-century building visible to the left