Aegongebouw, Office building and national monument in The Hague, Netherlands.
The Aegongebouw is an office building from the post-war reconstruction period located in The Hague's financial district. Its facade shows the modern architecture of that era with clean lines and functional design typical of the 1950s.
The building was completed in 1951 by architect Ad van der Steur during the post-war recovery when the Netherlands needed new business centers. It ranks among the hundred most important Dutch buildings from this reconstruction phase between 1940 and 1958.
The building holds protected monument status and served as an important corporate headquarters, reflecting how the financial district developed after the war. You can see in the architecture how the Netherlands rebuilt itself and created new centers for business during this period.
The building is located at Aegonplein 50 and has electric vehicle charging stations on site. Den Haag Mariahoeve train station is just a few minutes walk away, making public transport access straightforward.
The building served as headquarters for insurance company Aegon and still combines active business operations with its protected monument status. It shows how major companies of that era built structures that later became cultural heritage themselves.
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