The estate, on the southern shore of Brunnsviken across from Haga Palace, houses two manor houses, the simpler "Pasch's Stone House" (1755) and the larger wooden building "Sparre's Timber Palace," built in the 1780s. Sparre left the property to King Carl XIII, and Oscar I was given use of the compound as early as 1816. It included gazebos, lake overlooks, and an alley of linden trees. Johan Pasch, who built the single story farmhouse, is famous as the court artist who painted the beautiful ceilings in Stockholm Palace's chapel and the court theater at Drottningholm.
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