North America

Europe

Pacific

Asia

Latin America

Africa

Middle-East


Sitemap

Linkpartners
 
 
attractionsindex.com
Home - Bookmark this site - - Submit an attraction
 
Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao
Zaanse Schans 
Europe - Holland 

With its traditional green painted houses, warehouses and windmills the Zaanse Schans gives the feeling of having stepped back into the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.With its traditional green painted houses, warehouses and windmills the Zaanse Schans gives the feeling of having stepped back into the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Schansend 1, Zaandam
Official website

The Zaanstreek is a centuries old peat district named after the river Zaan. This important waterway in the province of North Holland originated as a natural drain for the surrounding marshy peat area. The Zaanstreek with its many industrial windmills is believed to be the oldest industrial area in Europe. Industrial progress is easily seen at the Zaanse Schans with windmills in the foreground and modern factories on the horizon. The Zaans Museum collection gives an excellent illustration of industrial progression in the Zaanstreek.

With its traditional green painted houses, warehouses and windmills the Zaanse Schans gives the feeling of having stepped back into the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, however this is not an open air museum but a colourful living and working neighbourhood. The hamlet has not always existed though. Most of the buildings were re-located from other areas in the Zaanstreek in the 1960?s and 70?s as owing to urban development they were under threat of obliteration. They were safely moved to the Zaanse Schans; the exact location where in 1574 Diederik van Sonoy, a Governor in the service of William of Orange, with the aid of local people, erected entrenchments or Schans to hold back the advancing Spanish army.

The development of building construction, architecture, decoration and the use of traditional building materials are all to be found at the Zaanse Schans. The 19 listed buildings and remaining historic buildings are all tarred black or painted green. Green painted houses have become traditional in Zaandam but Zaanse green itself does not exist. A variety of greens are used today much as they were used in the past. This collection of buildings together gives a complete picture of how houses were built in the Zaanstreek during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Increasing trade and industry in Amsterdam at the end of the sixteenth century created the need for the development of industrial windmills in the flat, wet Zaanse landscape. Over the centuries more than a thousand of these little wind driven factories flourished along the river Zaan and in the surrounding countryside. Windmills were used for wood sawing, hulling and threshing grains, and the production of amongst other things; seed and nut oil, paint, snuff and mustard.

Search for hotels around this attraction



zaanse, schans, zaandam, mills, europe, holland


Rate this attraction:
12345678910



 
Copyright © attractionsindex.com, 2008. All rights reserved.