Hereweg 132-142 (Groningen)


The house 132-142 in the city of Groningen consists of six former cypriot dwellings in a traditional traditional style, jointly designated as a national monument. Description The block Hereweg 132-142 in 2010

The houses, located on the east side of the Lord Road, were built in 1894 for the accommodation of custodians of the neighboring Cellular Criminal Prison (now: Mes Mes Clinic). The property, designed by J.F. Metzelaar (1818-1897) is raised on a rectangular floor plan and consists of one lower layered lower floor under a saddle roof, which is coated with gray Dutch tiles. The façade is built in red brick. Each dwelling is two traverses wide and has vault openings that are terminated at the top by slight segment arches and stretches. The windows have hard rock subdivisions and are equipped with headlights with a six-roast pitch. Wooden blinds are placed on both sides of the windows. Above the front doors are two-part headlamps. The location of the beamed floor of the attic floor can be seen in wrought iron wall anchors, which are fitted over the entire width of the property. The floor is equipped with windows with six and four-row rows, of which the subdivisions are also made of hard stone. In between there is a band of masonry bricks. The front panels are closed by a wooden trench with a cross section. Both sides of the property are white-plastered. At the rear, the houses are equipped with small extensions, mirrored with respect to each other. A wrought iron fence has been placed as a partition on the front.

The former cypriot dwellings, which have now been inhabited by private individuals, have been designated as a national monument because they are considered "of architectural and typological importance" and because they are seen as a "functional part of the cellular prison complex". < / p> 53° 12′ 5″ NB, 6° 34′ 40″ OL

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