The DNA Holliday junction is a central intermediate in genetic recombination, We have designed and synthesized a DNA oligomer, J1a. as a model compound for the Holliday junction suitable to be studied by NMR spectroscopy and future molecular modelling. The design was based on a 46-base oligomer, J4, previously studied by Pikkemaat, J. A., van den Fist, H., van Boom, J. H. & Altona, C. [Biochemistry 33, 14896-14907 (1994)], including the propensity to undergo a self-folding process to give a four-way junction in which three of the four arms are capped with a hairpin loop. J1a, however, is considerably shortened by eight bases and thus contains only 35 residues which significantly facilitates the proton resonance assignments. The base sequence at the branch point is identical to that, in J4. H-1-NMR data clearly point to the presence of three hairpin loops in J1a and show that the double-helical arms adopt the B-DNA form. Quasicontinuous pairwise stacking between helical arms to give a single preferred stacked X-conformation is evident. The extent of folding into this slacked conformation is strongly dependent upon the magnesium concentration. Full Watson-Crick base pairing at the branch point iii completely preserved. The A/D-stacking preference of the small junction is the same as that exhibited by J4.