In 1953, more than three centuries after the Herengracht was created, the first house of the Ambassade Hotel was established in the building at 349 Herengracht.
From 1614 to the present
The historic heart of Amsterdam is known for its beauty throughout the world. The canals with their stately seventeenth-century mansions contribute to Amsterdam's traditional charm and are also appreciated as an important part of our cultural heritage. During both summer and winter, the enchantment of the canals attracts many visitors from all over the Netherlands and abroad.
One of these canals, the Herengracht, was excavated in 1614. The Herengracht is the most prominent of the three major seventeenth-century canals, the two others being the Keizersgracht and the Prinsengracht. Another canal, the Singel, is part of Amsterdam's earlier medieval canal system and is the location for some other buildings belonging to the Ambassade Hotel.
The odd-numbered side of the Herengracht where the Ambassade Hotel is located is where the older houses are found. After all, this side had already been developed before the excavation of the three main canals. Like the Singel, the odd-numbered inner side of the Herengracht actually belongs more to the medieval part of Amsterdam where people of all ranks and classes lived and worked side by side. The new canal was intended to form a division between the newly rich and the middle class. This division between the classes is also easy to see from the water. The old Singel is an inland harbour with wooden drawbridges to allow large ships and their merchandise to pass through. The elegant Herengracht, on the other hand, is graced with brick bridges that allow only the smaller delivery- and pleasureboats.
The houses built on the canals can be distinguished by their characteristic gables - the front part of the roof. The houses built during the earliest stage of excavating the canals typically have the old-fashioned step-gables that look like steps, or spout-gables that slant up toward one “platform” at the peak. About 50 years later, houses were being built with the somewhat richer-looking neck-gables that look like a neck with a collar or bell-gables that look like a bell, and for the wider houses there were cornice-gables that just went straight across. During the eighteenth century, these older gables were often replaced by a classic frontispiece or an attic with balustrade. By this time, more people were living in one area of the city and working in another.
next page
