Background
Gnudtzmann was born on 17 November 1837 in Copenhagen.
Gnudtzmann was born on 17 November 1837 in Copenhagen.
He studied architecture at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts from 1859 to 1866 and at the College of Advanced Technology from 1862 to 1865, graduating from both institutions. At the Technical College, where he remained the only student ever to take the exam as an architect, he studied under Johan Daniel Herholdt and after his graduation became his assistant, working mainly on the Danish National Bank at Holmens Kanal.
His most notable works are Saint Paul"s Church and the extension of the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University"s main building, both in Copenhagen. He was the father of Kaj Gnudtzmann. Early life and education
He also worked for Christian Hansen who had returned to Denmark in 1851 after many years in Athens.
Gnudtzmann"s first independent work was Saint Paul"s Church at Nyboder in Copenhagen.
His later works mainly included churches, schools and residential buildings. From 1892 to 1895, he carried out extensions of the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University"s main building, which had originally been designed by Michael Gottlieb Bindesbøll.
In parallel to his practical work, Gnudtzmann worked at the Technical College from 1876 to 1909, first as Herholdt"s assistant and later as his successor, and then became a titular professor at the Academy. He also sat on a number of public boards and committees.