Art Route 'Geheugentrip' ('A trip down memory lane').
Walking route, 3.5km
The Memory Balcony (Geheugenbalkon) is located on the corner of Hereweg and the southern ring road in Groningen. This vantage point provides a glimpse into the future of the city and at the same time is a nod to the past.
This art route has been specially put together in the context of the completion of the Memory Balcony. The route takes you along various places south of the ring that tell something special about the history of the area, but are also often very topical. The south of Groningen has always been an important place for contact with both friend and foe of the city and this is reflected in its rich history.
Open de route in Google Maps
This is what you will see.
Memory Balcony (Geheugenbalkon)
Studio L A
Hereweg Weg der Verenigde Naties
Tea Dome Sterrebos (Theekoepel Sterrebos)
Hereweg 122-2 (in Sterrebos)
Jewish Monument (7 elements)
Eduard Waskowsky
Hereweg 128
Music Dome Sterrebos (Muziekkoepel Sterrebos)
Hereweg Sterrebos
Cube Project (Kubusproject)
Karl Pelgrom, Eugène Terwindt
Kempkensberg 12
Kempkensberg
Kempkensberg
Gannets (Jan van Genten)
Lodewijk Baljon
Kempkensberg
Rock ‘n’ Roll
Richard Deacon
Helperzoom (DUO stadstuin)
Memorial internment camp
Jacques Hammes
Engelse Kamp (hoek Kempkensberg)
Timbertown Folly
Peter de Kan, Lilian Zielstra
Engelse Park (tegenover nr 43, aan het water)
There is a wooden house in the residential area of Engels Park, which was built there by artist Peter de Kan. Timbertown Folly, as it's called, gives the area's rich history a place in the neighborhood.
The starting point for this work was the poem 'Linie' by former city poet Lilian Zielstra. Zielstra's poem evokes the special historical stratification that is hidden behind the new residential area in South Groningen. She refers to three striking aspects: the Helperlinie, the 'English Camp' where British troops were received during the First World War and the high office towers of Information Management Group (now DUO) and the Tax Authorities. The four high towers, the last of which was built in 1981, dominated the skyline of Groningen for a long time. The latter was demolished in 2011 for the purpose of the new residential area.
The name of the wooden house, Timbertown Folly, refers to a popular cabaret group that originated in the English Kamp and that performed throughout the Netherlands. Folly means foolish and is also the English term for a 'useless' architectural element (think: man-made ruin or cave), such as can often be found in English landscape-style parks. The folly contains the poem and memories of the Helper Line and the office flats that stood here. Eventually, the cottage will overgrow with honeysuckle. De Kan thus tries to bridge the divide between architecture and nature. Visitors are welcome to walk into the cottage, take a seat and rest or wait.
Untitled (mural)
Nic Bezemer
Helperlinie 2 (zichtbaar vanaf de Engelse Kamp, op buitenmuur Van Mesdagkliniek)
Pulse! (Puls!) (2 parts)
Bernadet ten Hove
Verlengde Hereweg (Natte Brug)
City coat of arms (2 pieces)
Willem Valk
Hereweg (Natte Brug)
Bunker
Thomsonstraat 33
De Papiermolen
Papiermolenlaan 3
Memory Balcony (Geheugenbalkon)
Studio L A
Hereweg Weg der Verenigde Naties