Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Tuindorp De Burgh: a white garden village by Dudok




The bright white of the buildings designed by Dudok set them apart from the surrounding buildings in the local brown brick. On the main thoroughfare (Geldropseweg) the garden village presents itself with detailed corner buildings with shops behind rounded bay windows.



Monotony is avoided by staggering the building line and raising portions of the roofline. These are the classic Unwinesk devices of the Garden City Movement used here together with New Objective Architecture. The litteral translation of Tuindorp is garden village. This village feel is emphasised by the use of ample gardens at the front and the back of the houses. This creates a green setting for people to live in houses filled with air and light (the modernist ideals for future living).



The trees in the streets are now fully grown and cast their dappled shade on the roads. The layout of the roads is linear, but through the clever use of T-junctions the sightlines are kept short. All roads in the garden village were planted with trees. also all front garden were planted with privet hedges. This still creates a great sense of coherence within the "white village".



In the middle of this log row of terraced housing the roofline is raised to accommodate loggias. On the end the corner building is brought forward to create a more intimate feel and a gate-like effect. Also note the balconies that protrude over the entrances as rain awnings and the round windows.



Another way of ending the rows of terraced houses is to have these turret-like corners. They effectively break up the horizontal lines of the buildings and signal a side street.



The corner is made by turning the corner building 90 degrees. Also note the different way in which the windows are set in the facade. In the long facades the windows form ribbons or large blocks of glass framed by thin metal strips; on the corners the square and rectangular windows are regularly distributed across the full height of the facade thus emphasising the vertical. The buildings Dudok designed were partly inspired by the block designed by Oud for the Weißenhofsiedlung in Stuttgart.On the inside the layout is rather conventional, but on the outside several citations of Oud's architecture were included in the designs. The buildings have not been rendered like the modernist Bauaus-buildings in Stuttgart, but executed in bricks painted white on a black strip reminiscent of the designs of Aalto.



The influence of Bauhaus also shines through in these long facades. Dudok gives them his own twist. As an architect he was a modernist without the hang-ups of most of his colleagues about shape, colour and materials. Dudok is best known as an exponent of brick cubism, although his work always has a subtle, but distinct decorative twist.



The central square (Burghtplein) is a public garden with a playground. The buildings frame the diamond shaped open green space. On the west  side the offices of the DAF-factory once stood. Now they have been replaced with houses in a sympathetic style. In the original plans this small garden square would serve as a focal point for the western part of the garden village; in the east a much larger tapering space with (skating) pond an public garden next to the proposed church was envisaged.



Through clever design, and with little difference in materials or colours the long rows of terraced housing are never boring and never give the feel of an urban housing estate.



The redevelopment of the brown field site of the DAF-factory was done most excellently. The new layout of streets mirror those on the other side of the garden square. Also the building style is mirrored, but to distinguish them from the old Dudok-buildings the new housing has dark roofs and a red trim at the base of the brick facades painted white. This is how you add new buildings to an area with a strong character!



Huize De Burgh was rebuilt in 1912 in a revival style. Originally the building faced the other way and consisted of a castle keep. This medieval donjon is still at the core of the present mansion house. The house is now in use as a convent and spiritual retreat. The garden village was built on land adjoining this estate and was named after it.



The postwar portion of Tuindorp De Burgh (phase 3) was not designed by Dudok and has been built in the dominant brown brick of the area. Several new types of housing were built here. Some were maisonettes, indicated by the four doors. The red and white checkered flag is the flag of Brabant by the way. On the left a type mostly built in the first building campaign of 1947 with a piano nobile above a half sunken kitchen.



Because of the different colour of the brick facades and the absence of a lower trim the feel of this part of the garden village is very different. This part is also colloquially know as het Bruine Dorp (the brown village). Unwinesk principles are still applied in the design and placement of the housing.



The Church of Fatima was built alongside an old road and not according to the original plan of Dudok, by a parish priest who felt that Catholics should not live in those modernist white houses, but in more traditional brick structures befitting their inherent nature. This was a sentiment often vented by the clergy with the aim of keeping their flock meek and abiding. The building of the church in the "wrong place" was an active act of defiance. The church (on the left) is presently no longer in use! Most of the 1950s buildings in this part of the garden village have been built in a traditionalist style.



The last buildings to have been built originally consisted of small maisonettes, and have since been converted into so-called boven-onderwoningen. The two upper dwellings have been joined. One door of the original four has been bricked up.

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