Passeerdersgracht


The Passeerdersgracht is a short canal in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, that connects the Prinsengracht with the Lijnbaansgracht.
The canal is the southernmost in the Jordaan neighbourhood and borders the west part of the Grachtengordel.

Name

The Passeerdersgracht is named after a passeerderij, an old name for a workshop where leather was manufactured and processed.

History

The canal originated when the canal belt was dug south from the Brouwersgracht starting in 1612.
In the 19th century six of the eleven Jordaan canals were filled in.
Only the Bloemgracht, Egelantiersgracht, Lauriergracht, Looiersgracht and Passeerdersgracht remained, connecting to the Prinsengracht, Keizersgracht, Herengracht, Singel, Lijnbaansgracht, Brouwersgracht, Leliegracht and Leidsegracht.
The former Hogeschool voor Economische Studies / First Public Trade School on the corner of Passeerdersgracht, is located on a filled-in part of Lijnbaansgracht: the Raamplein.
In many places in the Jordaan there were so-called gangen, alleys or corridors between the houses.
These narrow alleys gave access to rear areas that held courtyards where the less fortunate lived in often dilapidated shelters, often built illegally.
For example, in the "Walenhoek" on the Passeerdersgracht there was the "Walengang" between numbers 15 and 17.
This corridor was demolished in 1850 for construction of the former Toevlugt voor Behoeftigen on Passeerdersgracht 9–19.
The building of the former Arbeidsbeurs on Passeerdersgracht 28-32, at the corner of Tweede Passeerdersdwarsstraat, was designed around 1915 by architects Joan van der Mey and Piet Kramer. Until the summer of 2012 this monumental building housed one of the two branches of the Amsterdam youth circus Circus Elleboog.
Elleboog then moved to a new location, Laan van Spartaan in Amsterdam-West.
Most of the canal houses on the Passeerdersgracht have been converted into residential houses.

Trivia

In the book Rood paleis by Ferdinand Bordewijk there is a brothel on the center of Passeerdersgracht, just before the outbreak of World War I.