- Source: Karel Hendrik van Brederode
Karel Hendrik van Brederode (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈkaːrəl ˈɦɛndrɪk fɑm ˈbreːdəˌroːdə]; 11 December 1827 – 19 September 1897) was a Dutch engineer and architect of railway stations. In 1847 he was cofounder of the Koninklijk Instituut van Ingenieurs in The Hague.
Buildings
Over 110 railway stations in the Netherlands were built following Brederode's design. Among these were:
Den Helder railway station (1862–1958; demolished)
Roermond railway station (1862)
Sittard railway station (1862–1923)
Tilburg railway station (1862–1961; demolished)
Harlingen railway station (1863)
Leeuwarden railway station (1863)
Zutphen railway station (1863–1951; demolished)
Alkmaar railway station (1864)
Eindhoven railway station (1864–1912; demolished)
Hoogezand-Sappemeer railway station (1865–1989; demolished)
Scheemda railway station (1865)
Steenwijk railway station (1865–1972; demolished)
Winschoten railway station (1865)
Zuidbroek railway station (1865)
Zwolle railway station (1866)
Vught railway station (1866)
Nieuweschans railway station (1867–1973; demolished)
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Stasiun Tilburg
- Karel Hendrik van Brederode
- Karel (given name)
- Scheemda railway station
- Zuidbroek railway station
- Winschoten railway station
- Schagen railway station
- Castricum railway station
- Meppel railway station
- Hoogezand-Sappemeer railway station
- Alkmaar railway station