The northern section of the Garden Village
Buiksloterham situated over the reservation for the proposed Johan van Hasselt
Canal was developed after work started on the southern section. The fact that
building work started so much later wasn't intentional however. It had
everything to do with policy changes concerning social housing on government
level which hindered the Amsterdam City Council to execute its ambitious goals.
The northern part of the Garden Village Buiksloterham
was developed in sections over a period of time, starting in 1921 and ending in
1950 with the completion of the church. The northern section of the garden
village comprises of several distinct section on either side of the central
Kamperfoeliestraat (Honeysuckle Street) that all have their own colloquial name:
Floradorp (F), Zomers Buiten (ZB) also known as BLoemenbuurt Noord, Latherusbuurt
Noord (Ln) and Latherusbuurt Zuid (Ls) that are both also known as Bloemenbuurt
Zuid, and Bloemenbuurt West (W) directly north of the Mosplein (Moss Square -
M) with the church. This former Maranatha Church is now the Coptic Church of the
Virgin Mary.
All housing was built aided by subsidies given out
under the 1901 Housing Act by central government to local authorities and
housing associations. Due to the large pool of bad housing available in the
city Amsterdam could claim large sums to aid its house building activities in
the northern Y polders. The houses needed to comply with the standards set by
central government to be eligible for a government advance to finance
construction. The advance under favourable conditions needed to be repaid by
the local authority or housing association in the decade after completion. The
1917 Emergency Housing Act that financed the Disteldorp and Vogeldorp housing
made possible government grants to finance the building of emergency housing.
The housing in the northern section of the garden
village was built in several building campaigns by both the Municipal Housing
Service of Amsterdam and several housing associations and building coops. Each
developed a number of houses in a distinct design, clearly setting each
contribution to the whole garden village apart from one another. After WW2 the
western section was completed (completion had originally been planned for 1940).
Although the city council preferred to build all the
housing themselves, in large part financed by government advances, sections of
the proposed new garden villages were set aside for development by housing
associations. This move was in part practical as during the 1920s central
government turned away from financing house building by municipalities but
instead preferred homebuilding by housing associations. In 1921 Woningbouwvereniging Ons Belang
(literally: Housing Association Our Stake) starts the development of 4 blocks
of housing around Andoornstraat (Woundwort Street). The adjoining plot between
the Clematisstraat (Clematis Street) and Latherusstraat (Vetchling Street) Protestantse Woningbouw (Protestant
Building Society) erected working class housing in 1925. These housing
associations had problems getting house building started because of the high
land values. So the city council decided to provide a guarantee for the
purchase of land in the Polder Buiksloterham to the housing association Zomers Buiten (literally: Country
retreat for Summer). The housing association starts building between the Azaleastraat (Azalea Street) and Sneeuwbalstraat (Viburnum Street) in
1924. The Municipal Housing Service started building new housing north of this
area in 1927. A private developer built the houses, shops and cinema between
Mosveld and Mosplein (Moss Square).The houses in the undeveloped area on either
side of the Ribesstraat (Current
Street) were built between 1929 and 1932 by Woningbouwvereniging
Eigen Haard (literally: Housing Association Home Hearth). They also
developed the homes along Heggerankweg
(Bryony Road). South of these houses the Amsterdamsche
Coöperatieve Onderwijzers Bouwvereniging (Amsterdam Building Cooperative
for Teachers) built houses in 1931 on the Kamperfoelieweg
(Honeysuckle Road) and later along the southern stretch of the Heggerankweg.
The layout of the northern section of Tuindorp
Buiksloterham made the most of the terrain and at the same time allowed for a
gradual development as this part of the garden village would be divided amongst
several housing associations. Green squares form the focus of the wedge shaped
portions that make up the garden village. In the earliest part the lines don't
converge within the garden village as they do in the later northern portions. Amenities
like a police station, fire station, old peoples housing, schools, shops and
communal hall were all located on one of the axis in the street layout or on a
green square.
The section of the garden village north of the canal
reservation was treated as a separate entity and consisted of several
wedge-shaped neighbourhoods that now make up the Floradorp (Village of Flora) and the Bloemenbuurt (Neighbourhood of the Flowers) further south. The name
Tuindorp Buiksloterham has fallen
into disuse and as mentioned before the inhabitants tend to subdivide the
sections of the garden village into neighbourhoods. The Florapark was planned
as part of the total layout thus adhering to garden city ideals of living in a
green and healthy environment.
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