Valnøddevænget 10, also known as Villa Gøjgaard, is a house designed by Kay Fisker in the Snekkersten district of Helsingør, Denmark.
Friis had bought a16,438 square metre parel of land from Kronborg Vrickyard with the intention of building a country house on the site.
He charged the just 23-year-old Kay Fisker with the design of the building after noticing his entry in Politiken's 1916 summerhouse competition.
[2] Villa Højgaard combines influences from Nordic Classicism and English cottage architecture (Baillie Scott).
A semi-circular avant-corps, topped by a shallow, almost flat, copper-clad dome, projects from the west side of the main wing.