| Michel de Klerk is probably the best known of the architects comprising the Amsterdam school, a movement originating in about 1915 and involving not only architecture but other arts and crafts as well--furniture design, sculpture, typography, and textile design, for example. This movement is characterized by expressionism, creative use of materials and forms that are not only functional but creative as well--note, for example, the fenestration in this building as well as the unusual roof lines. This building has attained iconic status as representative of Amsterdam School principles. 
 
 | 
| The short side of the triangular-shaped buildingThis "workers' palace" built for a socialist housing association, is called "the ship" in part because of its triangular plan.  This was the third complex De Klerk designed in the Spaarndammerbuurt district in northwestern Amsterdam; it is the most famous and expresses the architect's vision most fully.  Here on the short side of the triangle, the five story building drops down to two stories and faces a small square.  The tall tower is only decorative, not functional.  The site was in fact triangular and a school was already there which the architect incorporated in his plan.  (This third side of the building is not pictured.)  The wings here also terminate in rounded corners. |   | 
	|  |  | 
|   |   | The five-story housing blocks flanking the short side with the towerOriginally this residential building had 102 dwellings for workers, a school, a meeting room, and a post office).  The Post Office (not pictured) is now a small museum. | 
	|  |  | 
|   |   |   | 
	|  |  | 
| Note that the wings end in rounded corners and the roof, which is lower on this side, has a vernacular feel--perhaps like local farms. 
 | 
|   |   |   | 
	|  |  | 
|   |   |   | 
	|  |  | 
|   |   |