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Margaret Staal-Kropholler, frequently referred to as Margaret Kropholler, (27 June 1891,
Haarlem Haarlem (; predecessor of ''Harlem'' in English) is a city and municipality in the Netherlands. It is the capital of the province of North Holland. Haarlem is situated at the northern edge of the Randstad, one of the most populated metropoli ...
- 15 November 1966,
Amsterdam Amsterdam ( , , , lit. ''The Dam on the River Amstel'') is the Capital of the Netherlands, capital and Municipalities of the Netherlands, most populous city of the Netherlands, with The Hague being the seat of government. It has a population ...
) was the first woman in the Netherlands to practice as a professional architect.


Biography

After completing her schooling in Amsterdam in 1907, she became a trainee with the architectural firm Kropholler en Staal where her brother Alexander Kropholler had set up a practice with
Jan Frederik Staal Jan Frederik ("Frits") Staal (Amsterdam, 28 February 1879 – Amsterdam, 8 March 1940), was a Dutch architect, and a major figure in the development of modern architecture in the Netherlands in the first half of the twentieth century. He was the ...
. She then attended the arts and crafts school in Haarlem before taking evening classes at the Amsterdam Academy of Architecture (1914–1916). In 1910, Alexander Kropholler went off on his own while Margaret Kropholler continued to work with Staal whom she later married. Initially, she was mainly involved in the design of furniture, lamps and related objects but also had a few building assignments.Judith Grutzbauch, "Staal Kropholler, Margaret"
''NAI Nederlands Architectuur Institut''. Retrieved 8 February 2012.


Career

In 1913, when she was just 21, Kropholler received her first assignment, the interior decoration of ''Het Huis 1913'' (The 1913 House) at the Amsterdam exhibition ''
De Vrouw 1813–1913 De Vrouw 1813–1913 (The Woman 1813-1913) was an exhibition held in 1913 in Amsterdam celebrating the 100th anniversary of liberation of the Netherlands from French occupiers in 1813. It highlighted the achievements of women through the century ...
'' (Woman 1813-1913). In 1915, she worked for six months for the Amsterdam Public Works Department. From 1916, in addition to continuing her work with J. F. Staal, she began to practice as an independent architect. In 1917, she was one of the five architects who participated in the construction of 16 houses with thatched roofs in the park district of Bergen based mainly on the use of tiles and terracotta elements. Even at that early stage, the four houses she designed clearly belonged to the
Amsterdam School The Amsterdam School (Dutch: ''Amsterdamse School'') is a style of architecture that arose from 1910 through about 1930 in the Netherlands. The Amsterdam School movement is part of international Expressionist architecture, sometimes linked ...
. The successful part she had played in the project was noticed by H. T. Wijdeveld who commented on the fine work a woman had, for the first time, executed in the field of architecture. In subsequent years, Kropholler undertook further projects in the style of the Amsterdam School, receiving international recognition in 1925 when she was awarded a silver medal for her architectural work in the Dutch exhibit at the Paris Decorative Arts Exposition. In the late 1920s, her work took on a more Modernistic approach. In the 1930s, she collaborated with her husband on a number of projects. Staal appreciated her involvement, deeming her work artistically and technically excellent, especially the interiors she designed for the
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in
Rotterdam Rotterdam ( , , , lit. ''The Dam on the River Rotte'') is the second largest city and municipality in the Netherlands. It is in the province of South Holland, part of the North Sea mouth of the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta, via the ''"N ...
, completed in 1940. In the post-war years, Kropholler submitted a number of proposals for housing reconstruction which were turned down as a result of new criteria defining maximum volumes and floor space. By contrast, she was successful in receiving over 40 interior design commissions for store renovations. Thereafter, her architectural work was mainly limited to surveys and lectures, allowing her to remain active into the 1960s.


Concern with housing design

As both a housewife and an architect, Margaret Kropholler was conscious of the need to reduce the amount of effort women needed to put into domestic chores. By designing comfortable, well-equipped housing, based on functional plans, she could make it easier for women to run their homes. From 1918, when she made a presentation to the Dutch Association for Housewives on "The Women and her House", she frequently presented her ideas on functional requirements for the housewife in lectures and journal articles.


Key works

*Housing in Holendrechtstraat, Amsterdam: Together with other architects, Kropholler was commissioned in 1921 to design housing blocks in the south of Amsterdam where she adopted the style of the Amsterdam School in several four-storey buildings with symmetrical facades and projecting balconies. *Louise Went House, Amsterdam: In 1959, as a result of an initiative by Louise van der Pek-Went for singles housing, Kropholler was commissioned to build a block consisting of a central section with a staircase and two wings containing 170 units with kitchen, toilet and bathroom as well as 11 guest rooms. It was completed in 1963.


References


Literature

*Augusteijn, M., Kuijvenhoven, W. ''From a practical point of view, (''2013) Documentary *Kessel, E. van, Kuperus, M.: ''Margaret Staal-Kropholler, Architect 1891-1966'', Rotterdam 1991, 96 pp. *Loeff-Bokma, A.H., ''Margaret Kropholler'', in De vrouw en haar huis, (1929)8, 399-405. *Oomen, F., ''Margaret Staal-Kropholler'', in: N. Hermes, Intra Muros, twaalf Nederlandse interieurarchitectes van deze eeuw, Amsterdam 1992, 18-23. *Staal-Kropholler, M., 'Huisvesting van het onmaatschappelijk gezin', Bouw, (1953)51,992. *Staal-Kropholler, M., ''Onze woning-enquête'', De Huisvrouw, 31(1947)1,5. *Verkruijsen, H.C., ''Landhuizen'', in De Vrouw en haar huis, (1918)6,164-168. *Wijdeveld, H.Th., ''Het Park Meerwijk te Bergen'', Wendingen, 1(1918)8,4-12. {{DEFAULTSORT:Staal-Kropholler, Margaret Architects from Amsterdam 1891 births 1966 deaths Dutch women architects 20th-century Dutch architects 20th-century Dutch women