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Møinichen Mansion

Møinichen Mansion
Møinichens Palæ
Kbh Koebmagergade Post.jpg
Møinichen's Mansion today
General information
Architectural style Baroque
Location Copenhagen, Denmark
Country Denmark
Coordinates 55°40′49.54″N 12°34′41.52″E / 55.6804278°N 12.5782000°E / 55.6804278; 12.5782000
Construction started 1729
Completed 1733
Design and construction
Architect Philip de Lange/Felix Dusart

Møinichen Mansion (Danish: Møinichen s Palæ) is a town mansion Købmagergade in central Copenhagen, Denmark. It later served as headquarters of Royal Danish Mail from 1779 until 1912 and was known as the Royal Mail House (Danish: Den Kongelige Postgård). Købmagergade Post Office (Danish: Købmagergade Postkontor), was located in the building until June 2015 while the Post & Rele Museum was located on the two upper floors from 1907 until 2015. The building was acquired by the PFA pension fund in December 2014 and is under conversion into office and retail space.

The house was commissioned by Christian Møinichen, a protegé of King Frederick IV, who had been appointed as president of the Chancery in 1725. It was constructed by Philip de Lange but possibly to a design by Felix Dusart. Construction began in 1729 but when the king died the following year, Møinichen fell out of favour at the Court. He was charged with several cases of mismanagement, dismissed from all his posts without a pension and sentenced to return a large sum of money to the Treasury. By the time the mansion was completed in 1733, it had already changed hands several times. It was acquired by the king in 1734 and then briefly served as the residence of the lord chamberlain (lord marshall, hence its alternative name).

In 1779 it was adapted by Caspar Frederik Harsdorff to serve as Copenhagen's new Royal Mail House.Royal Postal Services had until then been based in another building on Køgmagergade which was now taken over by the Royal Porcelain Manufactury. Both enterprises were under the directorship of Johan Theodor Holmskjold.

Open two-whealed mail coaches operated on Copenhagen-Hamburg from the 1780s. A yellow, egg-shaped mail coach operated between the Royal Mail Building and Hamburg from 1815. until 1865.

In about 1900 the Royal Mail Building had become and the location in the middle of the Old Town had in the same time become still more inconvenient why it was decided to build a new a new headquarters next to the new Central Railway Station. The Copenhagen Central Mail Building was inaugurated in 1912. The building on Købmagergade continued to house a local post office for the city centre. A mail and telecommunications museum opened on the two upper floors of the complex in 1907.


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