Monuments in Noord-Holland

R. Stenvert en C. Kolman (2006)

Gepubliceerd op 26-03-2018

Residential homes in Middenbeemster

betekenis & definitie

From the 18th century, the partly under-basement and rear-built brick transverse house dates from Rijperweg 66. The gable roof is wedged between wooden bell gables, which are equipped with side pillars and a segment-shaped fronton crowning. The interior contains an 18th century tiled mantelpiece. The originally eighteenth-century, timber-framed, two-story, deep house Rijperweg 68 was given a plastered eclectic façade around 1870.

Around that time the mansion Middelwijk (Schoolstraat 9) was built in eclectic style and the mansion Middenweg 181, which was used as a presbytery and richer, with its accompanying coach house and a bridge with an entrance gate. Examples of rentier houses in eclectic style are the Middenganghuizen Middenweg 183, 185 (1877) and 188, the latter two of which have a matching bell-shed, and the middle aisle house Rijperweg 59, the split house Rijperweg 61-63 (1867), the house Middenweg 130 and the partly wooden building Middenweg 169. The more modest 19th-century houses are often completely or partially made of wood, such as the Middenweg 173 house with attached garage or workshop and the one-layered premises called Rijperweg 85-89, 91 and 95, built around 't Landje, partly with a brick facade. A plastered façade and a dormer window with decorative carving have the small wooden houses Rijperweg 71 and 99. The villa Middenweg 137 was built in 1890 in neo-Renaissance style. Rijperweg 73 is a characteristic example of a house built around 1910 with a tiled porch, a bay window and decorative masonry in the arched fields above the windows. The housing block Rijperweg 77-81 came into being in expressionist style in 1923.