Admiralgården
Admiralgården is a converted warehouse located at Admiralgade 17 in central Copenhagen, Denmark. It was built for the same company as the nearby Sundorph House and was originally used for storing tea. It was listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places by the Danish Heritage Agency on 5 March 1945, and was owned by Bent Fabricius-Bjerre until 2020 through the real estate company Metorion.
History
Site history, 16891805
The site was formerly made up of two smaller properties. The northern one was listed in Copenhagen's first cadastre of 1689 as No. 1762 in East Quarter and belonged to tailor Johan Christoffer at that time. The southern property was listed as No. 173 and belonged to magister Statius Koch.The two properties were listed in the new cadastre of 1756 as No. 214 and No. 215 in the East Quarter both owned by baker Thomas Johansen Seyer.
The property was prior to the 1787 acquired by baker Peder Jørgensen. He resided in the building with his wife Birgithe Elisabeth Jørgensen, their one-year-old son Christian, his brother Johan Henrich Henningsen, five bakers, a caretaker, a wet nurse and two maids.
Sundorph and the new building
The buildings on the site were destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795, together with most of the other buildings in the area. The present warehouse on the site was constructed in 1797 for the widow Mette Christine Sundorph. She was the owner of Mette Christine sal. Sundorphs Enke & Co., a company which she had taken over after her second husband's death in 1794. Its premises at the corner of Ved Stranden and Voldhusgade had been destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795 and it therefore had to be operated from intermistic premises on Slotsholmen until the new Sundorph House at Ved Stranden 10 and the warehouse in Admiralgade were completed in 1797.Mette Christine Sundorph's property in Admiralgade was listed in the new cadastre of 1806 as No. 162. It was still owned by Sundorph at that time.