Art Nouveau Architecture – Streets N – Z

Street Address Architect Style Build Year Details
Nieuwe Parklaan 55 J.H. Pfeiffer Art Nouveau, Transitional Architecture 1904–1905 Villa Ninni is a detached villa featuring a combination of yellow and orange brickwork, hardstone elements, and Art Nouveau decorative details. Notable features include balconies with wrought iron railings, wooden verandas, and a garden enclosed by an Art Nouveau iron fence.
Nieuwstraat 1 – 3b – 5 L.A.H. de Wolf Art Nouveau 1910 Former fashion store of the Lijnkamp firm on the corner of Dagelijkse Groenmarkt and Nieuwstraat, built in 1910 to the design of architect L.A.H. de Wolf in the style of the Viennese Secession. Constructed by contractor J.P.J. Lorrie.
Noordeinde 6 & 6a L.A.H. de Wolf Art Nouveau 1901 A three-bay wide building featuring a white glazed brick façade with blue and yellow bands. The central bay has a wooden bay window topped by a loggia, while the side bays feature tall round-arched niches with Art Nouveau decorations.
Noordeinde 11 L.A.H. de Wolf Transitional Architecture with Oriental Features 1911 Originally built for Marton Kulcsàr, an importer of Persian carpets. This four-story building was extensively renovated in 1911–1912. It features a shop-residence in transitional architecture with oriental elements, including preserved stained glass windows in the basement.
Noordeinde 43 Z. Hoek & J.Th. Wouters Art Nouveau 1901–1902 Known as ‘Mercurius,’ this was the first office building in The Hague designed with an iron skeleton. The Art Nouveau façade includes yellow brick, natural stone accents, and a central bay with a three-sided bay window and loggias.
Noordeinde 44–46 L.A.H. de Wolf Art Nouveau 1903 Originally housing the renowned tea salon Krul, this building features a richly decorated façade with glazed brick, natural stone, and iron decorative elements. It’s considered one of the best examples of the Sezession style in the Netherlands.
Noordeinde 58 L.J. Falkenburg Art Nouveau 1904 A 19th-century building remodeled in 1904 into a shop-residence with an Art Nouveau façade. Notable features include a bay window spanning the first and second floors, a balcony, and a loggia, all adorned with geometric decorations.
Noordeinde 164 Not Known Art Nouveau features 1850 Art Nouveau shopfront from around 1900. Corner piers have sculpted decorative patterns in bluestone and sandstone, and the glass front is set in a wooden frame. Shopfront signed: ‘Karel Meijer and H.E.M. Rademaker architects’. To the left, a doorway with a colorful tile panel signed ‘Holland’ Utrecht. The door to the residence (164) features ornamental ironwork and copperwork in Art Nouveau style; the shop door is simpler but in the same style.
Oude Haagweg 725 J. van Rossum Art Nouveau 1907 A rectangular townhouse featuring a gray-white brick façade accented with blue and orange decorative bands. Notable elements include a hardstone plinth and a commemorative stone inscribed ‘Eerste steen gelegd door A.J.Ch. Flinterman 1907.’
Paviljeonsgracht 46 – 54 J. Olthuis Jugendstil 1907 A corner building with shops and apartments, characterized by white and yellow glazed bricks, overhanging red-glazed tiled roofs, and a well-preserved Jugendstil façade.
Piet Heinstraat 40 J.Ph. Reeser Art Nouveau 1903 Shop-residence with an impressive Art Nouveau façade; also includes Art Deco elements in the shopfront.
Piet Heinstraat 105 L.J. Elkhuizen Art Nouveau 1902 A three-story shop-residence with an ornate Art Nouveau façade, featuring a distinctive shopfront with curved glass, stained-glass transoms, and decorative ironwork.
Plaats 11 L.A.H. de Wolf Art Nouveau 18th century Originally an 18th-century building, its façade was updated in 1903 with an Art Nouveau shopfront designed by L.A.H. de Wolf, preserving the historical structure while adding decorative elements.
Plaats 20 L. Simons Art Nouveau 1904 A richly detailed shop-residence built for the Goupil art dealership, featuring a natural stone façade with Art Nouveau decorations, including naturalistic leaf motifs and a prominent open balustrade.
Plaats 21 L.A.H. de Wolf Art Nouveau 1902 An early work by De Wolf, introducing the Viennese Secession style to The Hague, characterized by white brick façades with colorful bands, vertical emphasis, and geometric motifs.
Plaats 23 L.A.H. de Wolf Art Nouveau 1902 Part of the same building as Plaats 21, sharing the distinctive features of De Wolf’s early adoption of the Viennese Secession style in The Hague.
Plein 20 L. Simons Art Nouveau 1900 Commercial building with Art Nouveau details including curved window frames, ironwork, and stylized cornices. Once used for upscale retail.
Prins Hendrikstraat 86–88 P.F. van Goor Art Nouveau 1900/01 Double shop-residence with ornamental brickwork, iron balconies, and stained-glass transoms. Rich Art Nouveau decoration above the windows and along cornices.
Prinsegracht 42 A.W. Meyneken Art Nouveau 1908 Warehouse built in the Art Nouveau style with a decorated stone entrance, iron structural elements, and stylized lettering. Known as Magazijn Hollandia.
Spui 229 Unknown Art Nouveau 1700-1725 Department store façade with large display windows, wrought iron balcony, and elaborate plasterwork. Unified with 229a–c by symmetrical design.
Spui 229–229c Unknown Art Nouveau 1700-1725 Part of the same ensemble as Spui 229, featuring similar ornamental and functional characteristics reflecting early 20th-century retail architecture.
Spuistraat 16 M.A. de Zwart Art Nouveau 1906 Commercial building with stylized bay windows, colored tiles, and flowing wrought-iron balconies. An example of decorative urban storefront design.
Trekvlietplein 1 A. Schadee Overgangsarchitectuur 1905–1907 The wrought iron fences feature geometric Art Nouveau motifs. Between the pillars, the fixed fences rest on masonry balustrades topped with natural stone.
Venestraat 17 W.Molenbroek Art Nouveau 1905 Shop-residence with distinctive Art Nouveau window treatment, decorative stonework, and finely wrought iron railing above the storefront.
Venestraat 29 J. Mutters Art Nouveau 1902/1917 Twin façades for numbers 29 and 31, showing rhythmic repetition of Art Nouveau ornamentation and highly stylized fenestration patterns.
Venestraat 43 A.A. Mussert Neo-Renaissance with Art Nouveau elements ca. 1900 Shop-residence in Neo-Renaissance and Art Nouveau style, built in 1901 by architect A.A. Mussert for the firm Spiekermann in umbrellas and parasols. Red brick façade with yellow stone bands, wooden cornice on consoles. The wooden shopfront on a natural stone base includes a curved glass panel and richly decorated Art Nouveau elements: glass-in-lead transom, engraved mirror, and a sculpted shop beam with the inscription ‘Fa Spiekermann’ surrounded by floral work and flanked by figures with umbrella and parasol, and sculpted owls at each end. Upper floors feature a variety of Neo-Renaissance details including arched windows, decorative masonry, and Art Nouveau-style wrought-iron window railings. Interior originally included an ornate Art Nouveau partition and three large wooden cabinets in Neo-Renaissance style. Architecturally significant for its harmonious blend of styles.
Wagenaarweg 30 H.C. van de Velde Art Nouveau 1901/1902 Residential house with bay window, stained-glass detailing, and a brick façade exhibiting floral and curved motif typical of Hague Art Nouveau.