Monuments in Noord-Holland

R. Stenvert en C. Kolman (2006)

Gepubliceerd op 26-03-2018

Residential homes in Koog aan de Zaan

betekenis & definitie

A 17th-century origin has the broad house Hoogstraat 8. The wood skeleton is still largely present. An early 19th-century wooden façade adorns a stone facade. Also 17th century is the wooden house South end 128 with cantilevered floor and attic, and a lower side aisle with lectern roof.

From the beginning of the 18th century, the two-storey, partly wooden mansion Hoogstraat 12 with dormer window and an entrance gable with doric pilasters. The wooden rear facade has a higher middle part with a bell gable. The elongated rear wing ends in a seam room with a wooden bell gable. In the interior there is a paneling and a tile chimney from the construction period and tiled corridor walls; the sowing room is covered by a wooden barrel vault.

Examples of simple - largely wooden - houses dating from the 18th century are the 1700 (door calf) dating house dating from 1700 (door calf) and the houses Lagedijk 1 and 3. The L-shaped wooden house Lagedijk 52 has a saddle roof on the street side between two bell-gables in Louis XVI forms (store front circa 1910). The rear wing has an entrance with pilaster picture frame in Louis XVI style. The interior contains two late-18th century marble fireplace mantels. The house Zuideinde 32 has a swiveled in front at the front with rich crowning in Louis XVI style and a front with curved corner windows. The entrance is located in a recessed façade section with balustrade. The wooden back house from around 1750 contains a seam room with a bay window on the first floor. At Zuideinde 20 the swung in advance was executed with pilasters and a fronton in Louis XVI forms. Swiveled wooden advances with fronton and side meanders have the wooden houses Lagedijk 47 and Zuideinde 50 built in the beginning of the 19th century; the latter also has a garland decoration and a curved corner window in the front. At the same time, the houses that were swept in with a puffed-in advance over a brick façade date Raadhuisstraat 8 (two-aisled) and Zuiderkerkstraat 1 (pumice-faced corner windows).

From about 1860 onwards, the Hoogstraat 14 building (plastered with middle plastered) dates from around 1860 (circa 1860). Other characteristic 19th century mansions are the white plastered eclectic house at Lagedijk 3 (circa 1870) - the pediment of the middle ressault shows a beehive, the coat of arms of the Honig family - and the neo-Renaissance house Lagedijk 33 (also built for the Honig family) ( 1882). At the Stationsstraat there are some smaller houses in neo-Renaissance and chalet style forms, such as Stationsstraat 31, 33 (1888, J. van der Meer) and Stationsstraat 51. The plastered villa Hoogstraat 9 dates from the beginning of the 20th century (circa 1905). ), with corner turret and two-tier dome room, and the villa Hoogstraat 48-50 (1904) decorated with Art Nouveau and rationalist elements. Rationalistic elements show the houses Hoogstraat 24 and 34 (circa 1910). Designed in New-Historizing style is the high mansion Raadhuisstraat 38 (circa 1915) with mezzanine. Around 1920 the corner buildings Wilhelminastraat 2 and Breestraat 92-96 were erected with flat roofs and two-colored masonry in expressionist style.

Municipality architect J. Meyer designed the business expressionist home Breestraat 80 (1926) for his own use. The double house Sportstraat 12-14 (1930, E. Verschuyl) was intended for managers of the Honig company.