A focus on vernacular architecture is one of the
pillars that supported the garden city esthetic as advocated by Raymond Unwin.
He in turn was heavily influenced by German and Austrian sources that tried to
define and redefine indigenous design features in buildings. If the aim was to
provide a new type of living environment that married city and country the
typology had to be distilled out of existing examples of both urban and rural
architecture. As vernacular architecture
reflects local traditions it was viewed to be the perfect expression of the
built environment that aimed to house both former urbanites and new arrivals
from the countryside. The focus on a vernacular architecture was both esthetic
and social in nature.
In Beringen-Mijn a mining colony was developed to
house miners and other personnel. Most miners came from an impoverished rural
background. It was deemed fit to house them in structures reflecting the
Flemish building vernacular. Some of the buildings though have a very visible
Walloon influence with buildings (made to look like they are) constructed as
half-timbered houses with an infill of either plaster or brick. This makes
sense when one considers that mining was initiated, directed and financed by
French speaking Belgians.
The Mulhouse Quadrangles (1907-08)
were the first permanent houses to be built north of the colliery. Six were
built with concrete blocks that were manufactured by the mine company. The
buildings were made to look like they had been built in stone. The small side
extensions have been greatly extended over the years, resulting in a continuous
row of rather low houses between a street and a narrow lane.
The Laan op Vurten (Vurten
Avenue) is an old thoroughfare that has been incorporated into the mining
colony. The large houses (1910) were designed in a simple Walloon style with projecting
eaves and brick facades subdivided by bands of natural stone that accentuate
the windows and thus every storey of the house. A few houses are built in a Flemish
vernacular with stepped and pointed gables and non-projecting eaves.
The Walloon vernacular is present
in both workmen's housing as well as the villas for the white collar personnel.
Although some people believe the architecture to be based on English garden
city examples the architectural expression is modeled on examples of vernacular
buildings in Wallonia. The projecting eaves, use of banding above the windows
and flat chimneys are testament to this.
Everywhere in the mining colony
the past is visible. The old railway still runs around the first garden village
(Cité-West). Other remnants of the mining history such as this water tower can
be seen from within the mijn-cité.
The Cité-Oost (1920-'24) was laid
out along winding streets with a lot of variation in the architecture. Because
of the reoccurring use of the same materials and the same colours the garden village
does feel like a whole.
In the Cité-Oost two closes were
laid out. They are used as playing fields and not as a green around which
houses are built. Thus one of the most recognizable morphologic elements of a
garden city was functionally transformed in this mining colony.
The enormous church of Saint
Theodardus (1939-'43) named after the nineteenth bishop of Maastricht. It is
built in a neo-byzantine style. The primary school (1927) that sits at the
heart of the Cité-Oost is a large brick building built around two central
courts.
The football stadium (1924-'25) now
sits empty. It was built as an ensemble with two short terraces on each side
flanking the entrance.
The Stadionlaan connects the
football stadium with the Beverlosesteenweg. The street is lined with
semi-detached houses (1925) in a Flemish vernacular style.
The Kioskplein is dominated by
the Casino (left) on the far end of the ensemble and the bandstand in a rustic
style (right) in the middle of the public garden. Both the community hall
(Casino) and the bandstand (muziekkiosk) are built in an eclectic style mixing
both Walloon and Alpine architecture.
A view of the large houses (1927)
for middle management that sit around the beautiful Kioskplein. Seen here from
the public garden the Flemish vernacular style in which these houses were built
is clearly visible. A lot of attention had been paid to the gables the windows and
the window shutters on the ground floor. The ensemble is protected as a
heritage site.
The Eeuwfeestplein (Centenary
Square) consists of a tapering public garden with buildings on either side and
a Hotel (a lodgings for single male workers) at its end. The whole (1929) was
designed as an ensemble and is protected as a heritage site.
The Gouden Jubileum Plein is not
a square like the name suggests but a large diamond shaped public garden with
widely spaced houses (1946) around it in a rather formal arrangement. The brick
houses are all in a (simplified) Flemish vernacular style.
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