31"h. x 19"w. x 12"d. A two-story wooden house with thick exterior walls features a very steeped roof with high angled windowless dormer on one side; the house is painted an original pale green with brown/red roof and trim, and rests upon a thick wooden base that protrudes at the front for placement of flowers or garden pots. There is a six-pane attic window that peeks into a large attic to which there appears to be no access. Fancy architectural carvings edge the front roof line. The second floor features three windows with tin casings and pane frames; flowers are painted on one window. There is a curved wooden spindled balcony in front of the windows. At the lower floor is a center tin door flanked by 2 tin-framed windows. The front hinges open to two rooms, with high ceiling in first floor room. There are plain wooden floors, and walls have been repapered. The half-scale furnishings include settee,4 chairs, stool, piano, marble top table,fireplace, 2 drawer chest ,hall mirror, and desk; accessories include wall pictures and statuary. There are 2 small china dolls. The house, known in the Lego Foundation Museum inventory as the "Skottenborg House", is shown in Jacobs' A History of Dolls Houses (1965) on page 232 as one of a "street of houses" then in the collection of Estrid Faurholt, whose collection was later acquired by the Lego Foundation Museum.