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This list of historic houses in metropolitan Copenhagen provides an overview of historic houses in metropolitan Copenhagen, Denmark. Central Copenhagen. Name
The Gustmeyer House (Danish: Gustmeyers Gård) is a historic property on Ved Stranden, opposite Christiansborg Palace on Slotsholmen, in central Copenhagen, Denmark. It was built in 1797 to a Neoclassical design by Johan Martin Quist. The Nobel Prize-winning physicist Niels Bohr was born in the building. McKinsey & Company is now based in the ...
The Warburg House (Danish: Warburgs Gård) is a historic property located at the corner of Sag: Store Kirkestræde (No, 3) and Højbro Plads (No. 3) in the Old Town on Copenhagen, Denmark. The building was listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1964.
The low building is the Collin House. The property was acquired in 1836 by clothing retailer Lars Kanneworff (1790–1859). Born in Ringkøbing in western Jutland, he had initially been trained as a whool-and-canvas merchant. In 1816, after moving to Copenhagen, he founded a gentlemen's clothing business .
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The Bernstorff Mansion (Danish: Bernstorffske Palæ) is a Rococo-style town mansion situated at the corner of Bredgade and Frederiksgade in the Frederiksstaden district of central Copenhagen, Denmark. It complements the Dehn Mansion on the other corner, contributing to the symmetry of Frederiksstaden's Frederiksgade axis. The town mansion ...
the oldest amusement park in the world Royal Danish Theatre: Indre By: 1748 Old scene, 1874 New scene Neoclassicism (?) Assistens Cemetery: Nørrebro: 1760, (1706 as temporary plague cemetery) cemetery where many famous Danes rest * Rundetårn: Indre By: 1642 fortress tower, the highest building in the world without stairs City Hall: Indre By: 1905
The Matthias Hansen House (Danish: Matthias Hansens Gård), formerly also known as the Schoustrup House (Danish: Schoustrups Gård), is a Renaissance-style townhouse on Amagertorv (No. 6) in central Copenhagen, Denmark. Built in 1616, it is one of few buildings of its kind which survived the Copenhagen Fires of 1728 and 1795.