De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te Beverwijk

The house Breestraat 101 is situated on the main (shopping) street of Beverwijk and has nevertheless retained the character of a stately 18th-century residence. Traditionally this is a market street, a transshipment site parallel to the shore of the once nearby Wijkermeer. On deep, narrow plots hous...

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Main Author: Karianne Vozza-Vandenbroucke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KNOB 2007-04-01
Series:Bulletin KNOB
Online Access:https://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/631
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spelling doaj-6b59fdea804f4b2991d9770414c818672021-07-15T10:55:12ZengKNOBBulletin KNOB0166-04702589-33432007-04-01687710.7480/knob.106.2007.2.283582De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te BeverwijkKarianne Vozza-VandenbrouckeThe house Breestraat 101 is situated on the main (shopping) street of Beverwijk and has nevertheless retained the character of a stately 18th-century residence. Traditionally this is a market street, a transshipment site parallel to the shore of the once nearby Wijkermeer. On deep, narrow plots houses with gables were situated here in the 17th century, as can be seen on maps from that period. The present wide premises consists of two plots/houses of which the structure is still recognizable by the double hallway and a cellar with mezzanine room. Lourens Johannes Stelt (1736-1784) was responsible for combining the premises and building the large house. His son Pieter was among the wealthiest inhabitants of Beverwijk, became mayor and must have commissioned the conversion of the interior in the second half of the 18th century. It concerned the hall, the hallway and the front room in which stuccoed ceilings with ornaments in Rococo/ Louis XV style were applied. In this front room there are wooden panelling and mouldings on which five painted wall coverings with idealized Dutch landscapes were applied, as well as grisailles above the five doors, two of which were signed by J.L. Austini (1748- 1822). In the mezzanine room a bureau dating from the same period was built in. The back door is decorated with voluptuous Rococo, because it faced the harbour. Under different proprietors only small changes were carried out in the 19th and 20th century. At present the building functions as a presbytery of the Roman Catholic St.-Agatha church (1922-'24) of architects P.J.H. and J.Th.J. Cuypers. built in the back gardenhttps://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/631
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karianne Vozza-Vandenbroucke
spellingShingle Karianne Vozza-Vandenbroucke
De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te Beverwijk
Bulletin KNOB
author_facet Karianne Vozza-Vandenbroucke
author_sort Karianne Vozza-Vandenbroucke
title De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te Beverwijk
title_short De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te Beverwijk
title_full De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te Beverwijk
title_fullStr De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te Beverwijk
title_full_unstemmed De geschiedenis van een herenhuis te Beverwijk
title_sort de geschiedenis van een herenhuis te beverwijk
publisher KNOB
series Bulletin KNOB
issn 0166-0470
2589-3343
publishDate 2007-04-01
description The house Breestraat 101 is situated on the main (shopping) street of Beverwijk and has nevertheless retained the character of a stately 18th-century residence. Traditionally this is a market street, a transshipment site parallel to the shore of the once nearby Wijkermeer. On deep, narrow plots houses with gables were situated here in the 17th century, as can be seen on maps from that period. The present wide premises consists of two plots/houses of which the structure is still recognizable by the double hallway and a cellar with mezzanine room. Lourens Johannes Stelt (1736-1784) was responsible for combining the premises and building the large house. His son Pieter was among the wealthiest inhabitants of Beverwijk, became mayor and must have commissioned the conversion of the interior in the second half of the 18th century. It concerned the hall, the hallway and the front room in which stuccoed ceilings with ornaments in Rococo/ Louis XV style were applied. In this front room there are wooden panelling and mouldings on which five painted wall coverings with idealized Dutch landscapes were applied, as well as grisailles above the five doors, two of which were signed by J.L. Austini (1748- 1822). In the mezzanine room a bureau dating from the same period was built in. The back door is decorated with voluptuous Rococo, because it faced the harbour. Under different proprietors only small changes were carried out in the 19th and 20th century. At present the building functions as a presbytery of the Roman Catholic St.-Agatha church (1922-'24) of architects P.J.H. and J.Th.J. Cuypers. built in the back garden
url https://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/631
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