Similar to neighbouring Waterschei we see varying
building styles used in Zwartberg, but always with a strong vernacular
influence. Again this starts with a dominance of the Walloon vernacular, passes
through an English cottage phase and ends with Flemish brick vernacular.
The St Albertusschool houses a kindergarten, primary
school, a catholic youth club, a special needs school and activity centre for
people with disabilities. It has a cloister-like floor plan with two long wings
extending from the decorative and imposing front around an inner courtyard.
Originally each wing was assigned to either girls or boys with a kindergarten
at the front and primary schools in either wing.
The now disused railway between Genk Winterslag and As
separates the Cité Nord from the Cité Sud. The St Albertuskerk is a so-called
mine cathedral, a large church built for the miners and commissioned by the
Zwartberg colliery. Together with the neighbouring school it forms the heart of
the mining colony.
Next to the school complex we find a row of old
workers housing (dating from around 1915). Each building encompasses four
dwellings under an expressive roof. The dark brick used makes for a rather
understated building.
The post-war buildings are in the same style but are
whitewashed as can be seen around the Delcourplaats (left). These buildings
date from around 1919. North of the second building phase is a uniform building
phase (around 1925) consisting of short terraces with lowered corners giving
the impression of smaller scale housing. The buildings in this style consist
mainly of 4 dwellings, sometimes 5 dwellings and seldom 2 or 6 dwellings.
These houses are uniformly placed behind the third
building phase along a grid parallel to
the Torenlaan. They are built in a brick vernacular with some ornamental
detailing. These terraces are larger and typically consist of 8 dwellings.
In contrast to the brick buildings a small number of cottage
style inspired buildings were erected around 1922. They can be found around the
Cockerillplaats and Felix Despastraat.
The eastern extension of the Cité Nord at Zwartberg
consists of rows of identical brick buildings with little ornamentation except
for a brick trim around the front doors. Each short terrace comprises of four
dwellings and has a characteristic hipped roof.
The oldest buildings in the Cité Sud (1914) are built
in a distinctly Walloon vernacular architecture. They are said to date from
about the same time as the row of terraced houses east of the Torenlaan in the
Cité Nord. These buildings however have a similar architectural expression as
the post-war buildings in the Cité Sud (see below) built around 1919 with brick
facades and ornamental brick detailing. This makes me doubt the early
attribution of the Cité Nord buildings.
The oldest buildings in the Cité Sud are not
dissimilar to the buildings around the IJzerstraat in the Cité Nord but more
ornamental with horizontal banding and varying roof shapes. The buildings are
placed on an orthogonal grid around small public spaces that were (and are)
laid out as public gardens and play grounds.
Subsequent additions to the Cité Sud show a
simplification of the architecture and a shift towards brick vernacular. The
interwar period started with brick ornamentation on gable ends during the 1920s
(left) and ended with simplified brick vernacular. In the 1930s extension on
the west side of the Cité Sud we see brick architecture with hipped roofs in
short terraces not dissimilar to the buildings of the same period in the Cité
Nord.
The rows of terraces added to the Cité Sud in the
early 1950s fit wonderfully well in terms of their architecture, but as the
blocks don't follow the orthogonal placement of the Cité Sud they stand out
very much.
On the north side much of the original buildings have
been replaced. Mostly these new buildings date from the 1980s (shown on the
left) and differ greatly in style. The brick used in the two apartment
buildings from the 1960s (on the right) fits in much better with the
surrounding buildings.
The latest addition to the Cité Sud picks up the idea
of the cottage style with mock beams and plaster infill on the elevation above
a brick ground floor. These buildings fit well, but add a style that is
commonly associated with these mining colonies, but only really present in the
Cité Nord.
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