Admiraliteitslijnbaan, Amsterdam
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| Ropewalk of the Admiralty of Amsterdam | |
|---|---|
Admiraliteitslijnbaan | |
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| General information | |
| Address | Oostenburgergracht 79-81 |
| Town or city | Amsterdam |
| Country | Netherlands |
| Coordinates | 52°22′5″N 4°55′29″E / 52.36806°N 4.92472°E |
| Designations | Rijksmonument |


The Admiraliteitslijnbaan (Ropewalk of the Admiralty of Amsterdam) is a 17th-century building on Oostenburgergracht canal in Amsterdam. It has held rijksmonument status since 1970.[1] A plaque on one side of the building commemorates Czar Peter the Great, who may have stayed here in 1697 during his apprenticeship at the Amsterdam shipyards.[2]
The Admiraliteitslijnbaan originally served as the front building of the ropewalk of the Admiralty of Amsterdam. The covered ropewalk behind the building stretched some 500 meters to the IJ bay, between the Oostenburgervaart canal and Conradstraat.
The trapezoid-shaped facade dates to 1660 and is richly decorated with festoons, two oeil-de-boeuf-windows and niches with arched tops, some stretching vertically over both floors. The top of the facade is decorated with a sculpture of two lions with bronze swords resting against a coat of arms showing two crossed blue anchors, the symbol of the Admiralty of Amsterdam. The same coat of arms has also been incorporated into the festoons.[1]
Adjacent to the building is the Ropewalk of the Dutch East India Company, which also dates to 1660. The ropewalks behind the buildings no longer exist. It is now a residential area with street names that refer to the history of the location, such as Compagniestraat, Touwbaan and Admiraliteitstraat.
