{| class="wikitable" align="right" |+ Notable buildings and other structures |- ! No !! Name !! Built |- | 1-7 || Bank of Sweden || 1974 |- | 9 || House of Culture || 1971–76 |- | 11-21 || SEB Group || 1965 |- | 23-25 || Nordea || 1965 |- | 39 || Centrumhuset || 1931 |- | 46-48 || Ingenjörshuset || 1964 |- | 50 || Södra Kungstornet || 1925 |- | || Malmskillnad Bridge || 1911 |- | || Malmskillnadstrappan || 1932 |- | 52 || Norra Kungstornet || 1924 |- | 64 || Johannes fire station || 1877 |} thumb|Malmskillnadsgatan 2010 Malmskillnadsgatan (Swedish: "The Ridge Dividing Street") is
{| class="wikitable" align="right" |+ Notable buildings and other structures |- ! No !! Name !! Built |- | 1-7 || Bank of Sweden || 1974 |- | 9 || House of Culture || 1971–76 |- | 11-21 || SEB Group || 1965 |- | 23-25 || Nordea || 1965 |- | 39 || Centrumhuset || 1931 |- | 46-48 || Ingenjörshuset || 1964 |- | 50 || Södra Kungstornet || 1925 |- | || Malmskillnad Bridge || 1911 |- | || Malmskillnadstrappan || 1932 |- | 52 || Norra Kungstornet || 1924 |- | 64 || Johannes fire station || 1877 |} thumb|Malmskillnadsgatan 2010 Malmskillnadsgatan (Swedish: "The Ridge Dividing Street") is a 650-metre long street in central Stockholm, Sweden. It stretches northward from the Brunkebergstorg square over Hamngatan; crosses Mäster Samuelsgatan and Oxtorgsgatan; passes over the bridge Malmskillnad Bridge passing over Kungsgatan; crosses Brunnsgatan and David Bagares gata; and finally ends at Johannes plan near Döbelnsgatan.
In today's Sweden, at the end of the last ice age, the retiring ice sheet left behind several ridges filled with sand and rounded gravel, ridges called malmar (sing. malm) in Swedish. In the central-northern part of Stockholm, the Brunkebergsåsen, divided the Norrmalm district in an eastern and western part, Östermalm and Västermalm, and Malmskillnadsgatan is a street passing along the top of the ridge.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).