Increasing industrialisation in the Netherland really
took off after 1850 on the back of neighbouring Wallonia and Ruhr Area. The
Kerkrade Collieries of Dominiale Mijn and Neuprick - both exploited under
auspices of the Rolduc Monastary- couldn't meet the increased demand for coal,
so the adjoining area was prospected and new concessions were granted. The
Oranje-Nassau mining company exploited two such concessions after the coal
field of Oranje-Nassau -owned by Henri Sarolea- and coal field Carl -owned by the German brothers Honigmann were
brought under a single entity with four collieries named ON1-ON4. The combined
enterprise was the largest private mining company in the Netherlands. Other
private concessions were Laura & Vereniging and Willem-Sophia. All the
concessions hereafter would be exploited under auspices of the state by the
Dutch State Mines.
Sarolea was granted his concession in 1893, but it
would take until 1900 before the first coal was brought to the surface at
Oranje-Nassau 1. The first colony was built in 1899 as Kolonie Morgenster (Morning Star Colony) on farmland near the colliery
and the railway. This first colony was followed by a colony at Grasbroek and
one at Leenhof. Most colonies were built after 1908 when the German family
Wendel took a large stake in the company and introduced German city planning
models. After 1918 the focus shifts again and housing is not provided directly
by the mining company, but by specially founded building societies (most
notably "Ons Limburg" founded by dr. Poels in 1913) and housing
coops. The second wave of miners housing thus takes the shape of social housing
inspired by garden city models.
The Colonies Husken (H - 1906) and Grasbroek (GB - 1904)
were built directly north of the ON1 Colliery. Husken -which originally also
featured a row of semidetached housing for middle management- comprises of two
rows of Mulhouse Quadrangles. Between
1915-18 this colony was expanded with the Musschemig Colony (M) comprising of
white semid etached houses arranged according to artistic principles around a
small public garden (G). This colony -instigated by the Wendel family- shows
the direction factory housing was taking after 1908. Musschemig was expanded in
1920 by building two rows of identical terraces (T) of 4 along the edges.
Near ON2 -within the mining concession Carl- a colony
of Mulhouse Quadrangles was built on the land previously belonging to the manor
farm Leenhof (LH) between 1905-07. Colony Leenhof 1 (L1) comprises of 12 such
buildings on either side of a central street, much like examples from the Ruhr
Area. Leenhof 2 (L2) was built as a grouping of 6 more Mulhouse Quadrangles. In
1910 and 1911-12 respectively, the colony was expanded with a further two
sections for workers, Leenhof 3 and 4 (L3 & L4), again with Mulhouse
Quadrangles. Each colony also had one semidetached building housing two
overseers. Leenhof 4 also has some blocks along the main road set aside for
middle management (mm) dating from 1915. These are situated across from the
church (c) and school (s). Between 1913-18 a separate colony for middle
management was built hogher up the hill, on the other side of the railway. This
Colony Schaesberg (CS) has a striking circular layout and was designed on
Sitte-esque artistic principles. It is, however, not a garden village!
Beersdal Colony takes its name from a large manor farm
near the Caumerbeek (a brook) and was built halfway between ON1 and ON3 along
the thoroughfare linking the town of Heerlen with the city of Sittard via
Hoensbroek. This would be the largest colony of the Orange Nassau Moines. It
comprises mostly of Mulhouse Quadrangles mixed with rows of semidetached houses
for middle management in a regular layout. The street plan is a widened grid
with a large green space in the middle. The service railway (black line) once
cut through this colony, hence the change in orientation of the Mulhouse Quadrangles
on the left.
Colony Rennemig was built on the edge of the site of
Oranje-Nassau III (ON3). Here, not far from the hamlet of the same name a
colony was built that consists of several parallel streets with semidetached
workers housing. It is an example of the basic street colony. Between 1913-18
these streets running of the main road were constructed. The six double houses
along this main road were constructed first, the dead-end streets came second. These
streets stop abruptly at the edge of the valley of a brook (the Rennebach a
tributary of the Caumerbeek).The railway (in black) that once connected this
colliery with ON1 via Beersdal explains the difference in pattern on the right.
This colony is a good example of urban planning by engineers.
The other mines also had workers housing constructed.
These range from simple rows of cottages along a street (Laura and Sophia) and
cottages along purpose-built streets (Wieën Colony - State Mine Hendrik) to
groups of Mulhouse Quadrangles (Butting Colony for State Mine Emma and
Terwinselen 1 for State Mine Wilhelmina), or a mix of semidetached and terraced
cottages (Terwinselen 2). The Terwinselen Colony eventually grew into a garden village
after it was expanded in several building campaigns (1918-19, 1920s and 1930s).
The Colony Hopel was built for the Laura Colliery (LC)
in Eygelshoven (E). The first colony (C1) of this private mining company was
little more than a row of identical cottages along a pre-existing road on the
edge of both the mining site and the village. This second colony (C2) was named
after the hamlet of Hopel (H). It was situated between the colliery and the
spoil heap (sh) located along the railway on the other side of a brook (Strijthagerbeek)
that rises near the Winselerhof. This brook joins the Anstel river south of the
village of Eygelhoven. Further south the water mill (w) of Boerenanstel once
stood.
As is visible from the sketch of the colony below, it took
inspiration from the garden city model with vernacular-inspired architecture.
The setting is, however, that of a colony with a regular street plan and the
blocks situated parallel to the streets as the bottom sketch clearly shows. In red
the building that's no longer standing.
The Terwinselen Colony takes its name from the Winselerhof
Farm (WF) that still stands near the source of the Strijthagerbeek (a brook).
The State Mine Wilhelmina (SMW), opened 1906, was situated directly west of
this old farmstead at the end of a spur line of the Heerlen-Kerkrade railway. A
large spoil heap (sh) was located near the pits and would eventually take up
most of the site. Directly next to the mine two rows of Mulhouse Quadrangles
(Q) were built in 1906. These were followed by semidetached cottages (T1) and a
school (S1) between 1911-12. This was followed by an expansion northwards along
the railway with a mix of semidetached cottages, up-down apartments and
terraces between 1913-19 (T2). A Casino (C) was built near the oldest section. After
that the colony was expanded on the eastside directly south of the colliery by
cottages built along curved streets and around a small green (g). Most of these
buildings in this garden village (GV) date from the 1920s. The church (Ch) was
built in 1922 beyond a newly created village square (v). A centre was created
with shops (S) and a second school (S2). The area east of the church was developed
for housing in the 1930s.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteI wonder why you label the mineworkers houses in Leenhof with L1 and L2. As far as I know the houses L1 (Wendel)are built after the group houses you name L2 (Honigmann).
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