The free-standing, oval building on the quay (No. 44), nicknamed the
pencil case due to irs shape, is a former custom house and ferry terminal. The building was designed by Kristoffer Varming in the Functionalist style and is from 1937. It has now been converted into a jazz club and restaunt complex called
The Standard. The first part of the street (No. 5) passes
Bank of Denmark. The Modernist building was designed by
Arne Jacobsen as a replacement for the National Bank's old building in
Holmens Kanal No. 23 is the former
Navigation School designed by
Ferdinand Meldahl and built from 1863 to 1865. The
Levin House (No. 29) was designed by
Johan Daniel Herholdt for a grocer named Levin and built from 1865 to 1866. The building served as headquarters for
Danish Distillers between 1926 and 1968. No. 37, which now houses Hotel Copenhagen Strand, was built in 1870. No. 39 was built in 1869 and later came to serve as headquarters for
Nordisk Frøkontor ("Nordic Seed Office"), a company founded in 1879, whose name is still seen on the façade. A passageway next to the building opens to a yard and a former warehouse on its rear. The building has now been converted into serviced offices. The last building in the street, on the corner with Nyhavn, is called The Navigators' House (Navigatørernes Hus, No. 55). Its rounded corner is topped by a dome designed in the style of a
diving bell and the façade is decorated with
caryatids. ==Public art==