European Landscape Architecture: Best Practice in Detailing

(John Hannent) #1
The Netherlands

Project history
Broad, slow rivers are an integral part of the delta
landscape in the Netherlands. In this flat country,
their fall is only slight, and these rivers seem to
flow more slowly than they do. But while they look
peaceful, appearances can be deceptive. For the
low-lying land of the delta needs protection not only
against the sea, but also against the rivers.

The Netherlands has always been at the mercy of
water. Over the years, increasingly radical measures
have been taken to keep it out, and thereby to pro-
tect new and reclaimed land. It was for precisely
this purpose that public organisations – the so-
called regional water boards – were established as
long ago as the early Middle Ages.

As technology advanced, the number of floods was
gradually reduced. However, in the second half of
the twentieth century, coastal and river defences
were tackled in an increasingly technocratic way,
and, as with landscape planning, matters were car-
ried too far. Too great a stress was placed on engi-
neering, and the measures became increasingly
uncompromising. One result was an illusory sense
of security. Embankments and levees were raised,
and land was taken for housing and other types of
intensive land-use when it was actually necessary
to the system of rivers, streams and coast.

In 1995, high water levels in the Dutch rivers
revealed just how dangerous it can be to deprive a
natural system of the space it needs. The real dan-
ger of severe flooding made it apparent that rivers
needed to be given more space in the stretches
between towns. It also became clear that the vari-
ous sluices, dams and water-control structures that
lay along these rivers should be examined anew.

Today, the paradigm that long dominated the think-
ing of the regional water boards therefore seems
to be changing. No longer are structures intended
as defences against the water regarded in isolation;
instead, they are seen as vital parts of the land-
scapes and towns that surround them. Such a view
provides scope for integrating that structure within
the urban landscape, and thus for linking a town
with the river that runs through it. The quay along
the IJssel in Doesburg is one of the first projects in
which a structure that meets the most recent safety
requirements will be integrated with a new, public
quayside, one which is itself part of a network of
public urban spaces.

Just like its riverside sisters of Zutphen, Deventer
and Kampen, the little IJssel town of Doesburg
evokes the heyday of the Hanseatic League.
However, since the decline that began at the end
of the fifteenth century, it has never developed a
true waterfront of its own: over the years, the area

6.1
Aerial photographs of the total project area and its
context

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