From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Piazza, entrance from the 18 September Square
Piazza from the adjacent Lichttoren tower

The Piazza Center ("the Piazza") is a building and indoor shopping center in the city center of Eindhoven anchored by a branch of the upscale De Bijenkorf department store chain and by a Decathlon sporting goods superstore. [1]

Opened in 1969, the Piazza was originally an open-air square, housing a red marble sculpture group designed by Mario Negri. The square was located between the De Bijenkorf building, designed by Gio Ponti and covered with green glazed tiles. Opposite stood a shopping center designed by Theo Boosten. In between was Perry van de Kar's sporting goods store with a tunnel to the right that led to the Fellenoord [ nl] neighborhood of Eindhoven.

The square was designed as a recreational square, but it was mainly used as a youth hangout. There were also meetings, such as those of the Red Youth and the Rocking Rebels (founded in 1979 and emerged from the so-called Elvis gang). It later became a meeting place for skateboarders, where Wieger van Wageningen[ nl] became one of the world's best-known. [2]

Ultimately, the activities mentioned did not fully meet the wishes of shoppers, the square looked a bit messy and the shopping center was not running smoothly. The Piazza was eventually completely reconstructed according to a design by Massimiliano Fuksas. It became a covered square. Negri's works of art were moved to the other side of De Bijenkorf, and the steel pipe sculpture designed by Frans Gast[ nl] was placed in Henri Dunant Park. An impressive steel entrance gate was built and a walkway was also added to the adjacent MediaMarkt electronics superstore and parking garage, located on the other side of the Boschdijk tunnel. The renovated Piazza was opened in 2015. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Piazza Center". This is Eindhoven. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  2. ^ a b Turck, Ankie de (26 March 2018). "Nostalgie: de geschiedenis van de Piazza" [Nostalgia: the history of the Piazza]. indebuurt Eindhoven (in Dutch). Retrieved 17 November 2023.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Piazza, entrance from the 18 September Square
Piazza from the adjacent Lichttoren tower

The Piazza Center ("the Piazza") is a building and indoor shopping center in the city center of Eindhoven anchored by a branch of the upscale De Bijenkorf department store chain and by a Decathlon sporting goods superstore. [1]

Opened in 1969, the Piazza was originally an open-air square, housing a red marble sculpture group designed by Mario Negri. The square was located between the De Bijenkorf building, designed by Gio Ponti and covered with green glazed tiles. Opposite stood a shopping center designed by Theo Boosten. In between was Perry van de Kar's sporting goods store with a tunnel to the right that led to the Fellenoord [ nl] neighborhood of Eindhoven.

The square was designed as a recreational square, but it was mainly used as a youth hangout. There were also meetings, such as those of the Red Youth and the Rocking Rebels (founded in 1979 and emerged from the so-called Elvis gang). It later became a meeting place for skateboarders, where Wieger van Wageningen[ nl] became one of the world's best-known. [2]

Ultimately, the activities mentioned did not fully meet the wishes of shoppers, the square looked a bit messy and the shopping center was not running smoothly. The Piazza was eventually completely reconstructed according to a design by Massimiliano Fuksas. It became a covered square. Negri's works of art were moved to the other side of De Bijenkorf, and the steel pipe sculpture designed by Frans Gast[ nl] was placed in Henri Dunant Park. An impressive steel entrance gate was built and a walkway was also added to the adjacent MediaMarkt electronics superstore and parking garage, located on the other side of the Boschdijk tunnel. The renovated Piazza was opened in 2015. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Piazza Center". This is Eindhoven. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  2. ^ a b Turck, Ankie de (26 March 2018). "Nostalgie: de geschiedenis van de Piazza" [Nostalgia: the history of the Piazza]. indebuurt Eindhoven (in Dutch). Retrieved 17 November 2023.


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