The Amsterdam Town Hall, built by Jacob…
July 1655 CE
The Amsterdam Town Hall, built by Jacob van Campen, who had taken control of the construction project in 1648, as the Town Hall for the City of Amsterdam, rests on thirteen thousand six hundred and fifty-nine wooden piles and cost eight and a half million gulden.
Van Campen, who is primarily responsible for introducing the classical revival style into Dutch Baroque architecture, draws inspiration from the public buildings of Rome and had wanted to build a new capitol for the Amsterdam burgomasters who think of themselves as the consuls of the new Rome of the North.
Faced entirely in a yellowish sandstone from Bentheim in Germany, it is at this time the largest administrative building in Europe and one of many candidates for the title of the Eighth Wonder of the World.
The huge central hall is one hundred and twenty feet long, sixty feet wide and ninety feet high.
Inlaid in the marble floor are two maps of the world, highlighting the VOC’s explorations and areas of colonial influence.
A large domed cupola caps the building, topped by a weather vane in the form of a Cog ship, a symbol of Amsterdam.
Just underneath the dome there are a few windows from which here one can see the ships arrive and leave the harbor.
The power of the building, opened on July 20, 1655, by Cornelis de Graeff, the political and social leader of Amsterdam, lies in its strict classical proportions and spare decoration.
Critics loathe the simple entrance—without stairs—on the ground floor.
The building is today called the royal palace.