The layout of the garden village Watergraafsmeer was
designed by two architects and based on Unwinesque design principles rather
than the garden village schematic by Feenstra. The available space has been
parcelled with some public open spaces and without allotments. The whole garden
village has been designed as a single spatial entity that is defined on one
side by a main road, on one side by an undulating canal separating the housing
from the cemetery and on two sides by a narrow green belt in the shape of a park.
At the heart of the garden village a central square
was designed with 4 streets running on the diagonal from each corner. A central
axial street link the square both conceptually and practically to the Middenweg (the existing thoroughfare).
The streets are foreshortened and not used as sight lines by a bend after a
certain length (different for each one of the 4 streets radiating from the
corners). The axial street has a symmetrical setup with a variable building
line -conform Unwinesque design principles- and long rows of terraced housing
creating a more suburban feel. This formal ensemble of the Brinkstraat isn't elevated to main entrance by means of
architectural devices. The actual main entrance -in a spatial sense- can be
found at the beginning of the green belt at the beginning of the Veeteeltstraat (indicated by *).
Most streets are straight with a variable building
line. Some streets are long, most are short. The layout of the garden village
is composed of several axial ensembles that angle towards or away from the
longer streets. These axial ensembles often incorporate public greenery, but
can also focus on "gates" or higher sections of buildings (shown in
orange). Most axial ensembles are fully symmetrical. Some are almost
symmetrical, but appear symmetrical nonetheless.
To break the perceived length of the streets the
building line is set back creating a wider street space. This design device is
emphasised by the use of protruding sections of the building or row of
buildings. This creates staggered spaces along the streets creating visual
interest. By employing protruding sections at the beginning and/or end of a
street the unity and singularity of that street is emphasised.
Another Unwinesque device employed in this garden
village is the treatment of the corners. This is done by placing buildings on
the diagonal, or rounding of the corner of a row of terraced housing. A variation
is to be seen in the winged blocks where a corner is emphasised by a central
block or terrace (often this building also forms the centre point of the axial
ensemble). These winged corners (shown in orange) can be concave with the wings
extending beyond the building line or convex with the wings extending behind
the building line. The wings typically follow the street or the public space.
All these corner solutions have been employed in Tuindorp Watergraafsmeer. Winged blocks are especially prominent around
the central Brink square. Some
corners are further emphasised in the architecture by raising the roofline to
create "corner towers". In the brick buildings with a pitched roof
the direction of the ridge is changed thus introducing a gable end that sits
next to a roof surface.
Closes were never an integral part of garden city
design in the Netherlands. This is linked to the dislike of dead-end streets by
politicians and the police. They make however a very efficient way of
parcellation possible, so some small closes have been incorporated within the
layout of Tuindorp Watergraafsmeer.
There are in fact 3 such closes (shown in red) and one inverted close (indicated
by i) on a corner. More common is the use of small greens (shown in orange).
These are part of many of the axial ensembles within this layout, often as an
end point of an axis.
The suburban development which is often typified as
varied and pleasantly irregular, in fact employs many formal design devices to
create this sense of irregularity. Though the same device is used in more than
one location the way it is translated into architecture varies, so the whole garden
village surprises at every corner as the outlook is invariably slightly
different. The buildings of concrete construction can't be recognised on the
plan. They were built in the south-western part of the garden village along
Unwinesque design principles but with a different take on architectural form.
Within the section built in concrete (the so-called
"Betondorp") two large building are constructed in brick. These are
both (former) school buildings on the Huismanshof (1) and the Zuivelplein (2)
respectively.
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