Monuments in Noord-Holland

R. Stenvert en C. Kolman (2006)

Gepubliceerd op 30-03-2018

Residential homes in Oosterend

betekenis & definitie

The large, deep house Kerkplein 6 has a spout facade with the year anchors '1656'. The block plastering is from the second half of the 19th century, the rear extension (no. 6a) from around 1905. The other buildings of Oosterend consist mainly of deep single-storey buildings (warehouses) with a green painted wooden apron with white wind springs and top broker.

At Koetebuurt 20 the top façade was executed as a spout (circa 1770). The deposit often contains a white framed 'door-shaped' shutter, the upper part of which is configured as a window and has a mirror arch; this indicates a (late-) 18th-century origin. Examples of this can be found at Blazerstraat 6, Kerkplein 2, Oesterstraat 17, Peperstraat 2 and 18-20, Schoolstraat 12-14 and Vierhuizen 3. The comparable houses Kerkstraat 11, Koetebuurt 15, Peperstraat 22 and Wierstraat 3 still have a section above the hatch. iron lifting hook. Younger examples of such advances show Kerkstraat 9 and Blazerstraat 3 (circa 1870). The transverse single-layer building Kerkplein 4 has a beautiful late-18th-century door with swallows. Other - later rebuilt - examples of 19th-century transverse single-storey buildings are Oost 82-84 and 85-89, and Peperstraat 8-12. The residential and retail premises Koetebuurt 2 (circa 1915) exhibit minimal expressionist details.