Vestergade 14

He wrote a detailed but naive and unintentionally comical account of the fire which was published in 1784.

The corner building was owned by a distiller named Jensen when it was destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795.

The western lot was the site of a tannery owned by Gert Eriksen Quitzows.

The two lots were then merged into one property by tobacco manufacturer Hans Bredahl.

One of her many tenants was Counter admiral Lorentz Fjelderup Lassen (1756–1837), known from the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, who was a resident in the building from 1822 to 1824.

The property then changed hans a couple of times before it was acquired by Lemvigh-Müller & Munch, a wholesaler of iron based at No.

14, on the other side of a narrow courtyard, is a four-bay building with a two-bay gable directly on Larsbjørnstræde.

14 and the gable of the rear wing are joined by a dressed wall with a gate on Larsbkørnstræde.

Valdemar Thaulow's hardware store
The property seen on a detail from one of Berggreen's block plans of Northern Quarter, 1886–88.
The rear wing and gate seen from Larsbjørnsstræde