Monuments in Noord-Holland

R. Stenvert en C. Kolman (2006)

Gepubliceerd op 26-03-2018

Residential homes in Kortenhoef

betekenis & definitie

Older village buildings include the deep house Kortenhoefsedijk 171 (17th century), the dwellings that were covered with reed, Kortenhoefsedijk 172-174 (18th century) and the small transverse houses Kortenhoefsedijk 187 and 194 (early 19th century). The plastered dwellings are Emmaweg 83, Kortenhoefsedijk 170 (circa 1870) and the Huis met de Twee Linden (Kortenhoefsedijk 165; 1881) younger.

The façade of the eighteenth-century central corridor in Kortenhoefsedijk 153 was renewed in eclectic forms in 1897. This building has long been used as a polder house. Noteworthy is the wooden house De Karekiet (Kortenhoefsedijk 137), built in 1904 as a studio house by painter G. Mesdag-Van Calcar. The wings were built in 1938 (the left was originally a porch).

Built around 1910 are Kortenhoefsedijk 166 and the deep house Koninginneweg 95 with neo-Renaissance details. Late Neo-Renaissance details show the villa Soera Djadi (Emmaweg 25; 1912).

Expressionist forms have some villas designed in 1919 by W. Hamdorff with thatched roofs, such as Kerklaan 34, Het Huis in de Zon (Kerklaan 38) and De Gaard (Kerklaan 52); the latter was the studio house of painter A. Smeerdink.