Amsterdam -and for that matter the other historic trade
cities in Holland- are famed for their streetscapes of tall narrow houses with
decorative gable tops. Often all examples of decorative shapely gable ends are gathered
under the term "Dutch gable". The most abundant of these, the stepped
gable, should however not be included. The stepped gable is not particularly
Dutch, nor is it typical for townhouses.
Stepped gables were already used in Romanesque and Gothic
architecture, especially in continental Europe, for decorative facades (Schmuckgiebel or Prunkgiebel in German) on castles, grain stores, monasteries,
convents, churches and gate buildings. The steps are usually elongated or
capped, in Gothic architecture they often terminate in a pinnacle or finial, or they are crenelated. The use of stepped
gables is closely linked to high pitched roofs in a climate with high rainfall.
So when the city authorities tried to prevent fire by banning houses built in
wood and with thatched roofs the new stone or brick-built houses were often
adorned by a more decorative stepped gable on the front facade than the
standard triangular gable end. This process was pushed through first in the
cities and towns of the Rhineland and the Low Countries.
Especially in the Flemish cities the governing elite
and merchants used their houses as a representation of their wealth and status.
This lead to an inventive use of stone elements in combination with brick, the
use of coloured bricks and the use of intricate brick bond patterns. Also the
gable end becomes a feature, in particular in cases where an older house was updated
by erecting a new facade on the side of the street. A high gable end could in
those cases serve as an effective means of hiding the older roof from sight. A
Dutch gable (or Flemish gable) is a gable end whose sides have been reworked to
flank a central elongated section of the facade that is topped by some sort of
pediment or fronton. Most of the gables of this type should be classed either
as a Clock gable (Klokgevel) or Neck
gable (Halsgevel). The Spout gable
(Tuitgevel) is a very restrained variation on the triangular gable end with
raised "shoulders" and a flat-topped elongated section that replaces
the gable tip (the "spout").
The stepped gable is historically speaking not a type
of Dutch gable, but this type does dominate the older buildings in the Low
Countries. On the left two 17th century examples from
Geertruidenberg (NL). The house on the right has replacement windows, the
facade on the left shows the original arrangement. In the middle two much older
examples from Lièrre (B) with stone casements around the windows. The example
from Herentals (B) shows that stepped gables weren't only used for gable end
but could also be utilised for emphasizing the entrance by a crow-stepped
dormer.
The so-called Dutch gable was a notable feature of
Renaissance architecture in the Low Countries and the Rhineland. The more
decorative and elaborate types with their curves and volutes are quickly
absorbed into Baroque architecture. The spread of these Neck, Clock, and Spout
gables was mainly the result of the spread of commercial enterprise and
merchants, who brought with them their fancy brick-built facades. The first
Neck gable to be built in Amsterdam in 1638 was by (Flemish-born) Philip
Vingboons. This was no less than 70 years after the type had been pioneered in
Antwerp (the Neck gable on the City Hall dates from 1565).
On the left to examples of elaborate gables in
Antwerp. The left is best characterised as an elevated Clock gable with a
crowning fronton and double voluted corners. The same volutes are used on the
underside of the tiered, elongated Neck gable on the right with curved and
voluted flank pieces with additional obelisks, balls and a crowning statue atop
a closed fronton or pediment. This row of houses on the Old Market of Antwerp
(middle) shows the Renaissance Stepped gables with a revival-style Neck gable
with rounded pediment and decorative balustrade ending in vases. This row of
houses on the Market in Ekeren just north of Antwerp (right) shows that Dutch
gables were also used in small towns. Between the three Stepped gables we see
an example of a broken or stepped Spout gable with decorative balls on each shoulder and a
larger bal atop the "spout".
Until about 1550 all houses in Amsterdam had been constructed
in wood, despite regulations against this. After the destructive fire of 1452
the city council had decreed that henceforth all dividing walls should be built
in brick. Houses were still built in wood with planked facades and triangular
wooden gable ends. Between 1600 and 1650 -after the city had been overrun by Flemish
immigrants after the fall of Antwerp and other southern cities- all gables in
wood were replaced by Stepped gables (Trapgevel)
in brick or Spout gables in brick and stone, often with ornamented side
extensions and a fronton or ornament on top. Especially in the second half of
the 17th en the whole of the 18th century the Neck gable and Clock gable become
the height of fashion, becoming more elaborate, sometimes even tiered and
adorned with carved stone coifs and gilded ornaments and statues. These types
of Dutch gables are very shapely and were constructed using both brick (for the
central part of the "bell" or "neck") and sandstone or
plastered brick for the voluted sides, for the clawed inserts (of the Neck
gable), for the fronton or coif and for the trims and bandings.
After 1800 the so-called Dutch gable fell out of
fashion and many were taken down and replaced with parapet gables. During the
age of revival architecture around 1900 many new examples of Dutch gables were
built, often in a mixed idiom that was purely decorative.
We have a couple of nice Dutch Gables in Falsgrave Scarborough, I noticed them quite a long time ago and I think they make a very nice feature.
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