Former V&D Heerlen

The former V&D in Heerlen was designed by Frits Peutz (best known for the Glaspaleis) in 1958 as part of the store chain Vroom & Dreesmann (located in Heerlen since 1920). The interior design was done by Mr. Kober and his daughter Marcia and the builders were E. Joosten and L. Reumkens. The director in Heerlen was Adrianus Merkx.

Former V&D
General information
Architectural styleModern Architecture
Town or cityHeerlen
CountryNetherlands
Completed1958
ClientAdrianus Merkx & Vroom and Dreesmann
Design and construction
ArchitectFrits Peutz
Structural engineerE. Joosten & L. Reumkens

The building was relatively different for Heerlen, although used to modern architecture (Glaspaleis, former office Oranje Nassaumijnen, Monseigneur Schrijnen Retreat House etc.), this building was described as skyscraper like (10 storeys high). It has two entrances one on the Raadshuisplein and the other one the Geleenstraat, since the Geleenstraat is located lower the entrance there is 10 m under the Raadshuisplein level (which is also the case for the Town Hall, also designed by Peutz).

Situation on openings day

In this building 75,000 m of electric wiring was used, with 2000 sockets and a 100,000 watt spear-power supply. There was one central telephone system with 380 connections, 120 cash registers, a Pneumatic post system, three elevators for shoppers and two high speed elevators,[1] it also had three goods elevators.

There also were a loading and unloading dock for trucks and vans, 30 dishwashers that could clean and dry up to 9200 pieces of dishware per hour,[2] Further it included seven Escalators, something unseen in Heerlen.[1]

There was a tearoom and restaurant on the top floor, called the VenDorama.

The building now serves as an office to the town hall.

Heerlen: former V&D and town hall, by night
gollark: Animals cannot give meaningful consent.
gollark: It's "consistency" in an equivocationy way because obviously situation 1 is totally equal to situation 2 because they share some common factors.
gollark: I mean, I like them as a mode of transport, I just don't like knowing much about them.
gollark: I don't like trains.
gollark: Also "it might be bad for children because [EQUIVOCATION] and apparently bad study".

References

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