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THE
ARCHITECTURE
To speak of
the architecture of the Poortgebouw, one has to take into consideration
that it has never been used as what it was designed for.
 
Intended to
house the head administrative office for Rotterdamsche Handelsvereniging,
the building was completed in 1879 when the founder of the RHV Lodewijk
Pincoffs went bankrupt and fled the country to the United States.
In the following 120 years, the building would be adapted to fit
the needs of the various users and the everchanging surroundings.
The orginal
design of the architect J.C. van der Wall was for a monumental entrance
to the Binnenhaven consisting of not one but two mirrored Poortgebouws
reflecting the grandeur of the RHV. The 4-storey “gate-buildings”
would act as wind-blockers (windschermen) for the ships passing
through this narrow passage. Inspired by the London Bridge, the
Poortgebouws were also intended to mask the fact that the bridge
sat at an awkward angle with the Stieltjesstraat. Following
the Pincoffs-Affair, it was decided not to make the second Poortgebouw
although a smaller Poortgebouw would be made several years later
in its place. This little brother was demolished in 1937
when the bridge, once the largest “basculebrug” in the
world, was replaced.
 
The street
which passes under the Poortgebouw owes its name to the engineer
Stieltjes. The most curious feature of the building, and often overseen,
is its asymetrical Stieltjesstraat facades with one tower being
two window bays wide and the other of three bays. Built in Neo-Romanesque
style where symmetry was favoured, this asymetry is perhaps due
to the fact that the envisioned pair of Poortgebouws should have
first and foremost been viewed from the Koningshaven by the ships
entering the harbour.

Originally
there were 3 portals for traffic to pass through on the Stieltjesstraat:
two 3m wide walking paths and a central 1,8m wide passage for horse-drawn
carriages (4.40m and 4.90m high respectively). Invariably the most
drastic modification, the 3 portals were replaced in 19?? by a single
passage to adapt to the increased traffic of motor vehicles. This
construction of massive steel beams, which still exists today, ultimately
lowered the height of the passage to 3,80 m, a precarious height
which to this day results in transport trucks scraping (or on occasion
colliding) with the beams. In the late 80ies, members of the
Vereniging Poortgebouw welded shut the bridge crossing guards in
a protest action to draw attention to this situation. The street
construction was lowered achieving a height of 4,05m.
The walls are
of massive stone construction with a thickness of one stone inside
and 1,5 stones outside with rubble fill inbetween and a baked brick
finishing. Inside the towers, monumental wood and cast iron staircases
connect the 4 floors whose room height varies from 5m on the ground
floor to just over 3m in the attic. The current interior of the
Poortgebouw is a dynamic combination of the original Classical elements,
20th century technical and environmental modernizations and most
apparent, the renovations from office space into housing in 1982-84.
An unlikely task, and perhaps just a rumour, the current private
owners have ambitions to renovate the Poortgebouw back to its original
state in the future.
Although hard
to imagine today, the Poortgebouw was one of the highest buildings
in Feyenoord. From the upper floors, one had an overview of the
bustling activity in the surrounding harbours. view from the roof 1891 (click to enlarge) 
panoramic view (dutch fotomuseum) from roof same era (click to enlarge) Certain perspectives
from the Poortgebouw out were integral in defining the masterplan
of the Kop
van Zuid. In a subtle reference to the port history, a romantic
sightline to the Wilhelminapier has been preserved. Also the wandering
Stieltjesstraat was rerouted onto the axis of the house and informed
the shopping “Galleria” between the Wilhelmina Tower and
Municipal Tax Offices.

The Poortgebouw
was officially classified as a municipal and national monument in
1986.
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