Seventeenth-Century Canal Ring Area of Amsterdam inside the Singelgracht
The historic urban ensemble of the canal district
of Amsterdam was a project for a new ‘port city’ built at the end of the
16th and beginning of the 17th centuries. It comprises a network of
canals to the west and south of the historic old town and the medieval
port that encircled the old town and was accompanied by the
repositioning inland of the city’s fortified boundaries, the
Singelgracht. This was a long-term programme that involved extending the
city by draining the swampland, using a system of canals in concentric
arcs and filling in the intermediate spaces. These spaces allowed the
development of a homogeneous urban ensemble including gabled houses and
numerous monuments. This urban extension was the largest and most
homogeneous of its time. It was a model of large-scale town planning,
and served as a reference throughout the world until the 19th century.