Dajwór street was initially a road running along Kazimierz walls to the suburban farm on the bank of the Vistula river. In 1640, the farm was leased by Marcin Dajwór and the local residents named the Road the „Dajwór Road”, which eventually became Dajwór street. The only remaining part of the old Kazimierz town walls on Dajwór street is the stone wall of the Old Synagogue. In the 19th century, city authorities changed the name of the street into Wałowa street, however, the residents kept calling it the old name and so it stuck. In the street, there is a tramway track leading to an old tramway depot, currently housing the Museum of Municipal Engineering.
The tenant house was built in the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. It was owned by Abraham Stoger. Stoger was lost during the war, he was probably murdered in a concentration camp. In 1957, the Polish court declared him dead and before that, the building was nationalized by the government of the People’s Republic of Poland. Initially, the house was three-storeyed, the fourth floor was build after World War II. After Republic of Poland regained independence in 1989, the house was returned to its successors from Israel. They sold it and the buyer did a thorough renovation of the building, designed and rebuilt some of the apartments anew, then sold them to individual buyers.