, 1939 • A typical example of a raised frame façade with a small semi-circular center elevation is found on Nieuwe Herengracht 99, completed in 1700.
Jan Weenix painted five permanent paintings (wall hangings) for this house at the end of the 17th century. The client was Jacob H. de Granada, owner of a plantation in
Suriname. Because of the large room at the front overlooking the Plantage, that house was popular with art lovers. The paintings were privately sold in 1923 to
William Randolph Hearst for his
Hearst Castle on the California coast. The canvases were subsequently spread over half the world. • The only nude that the painter
Jacob de Wit painted is from Nieuwe Herengracht 99. The panel was commissioned for the library of
Isaac de Pinto and hangs in the
Amsterdam Museum. • The double house Nieuwe Herengracht 103, with a sandstone frame façade in
Louis Quinze style, a door and window frame and a stylish frontal sidewalk and the rococo decorative fence. Aaron Joseph de Pinto, 1710–58, a rich Jewish merchant and art collector, bought the late 17th-century building in 1734 and had it thoroughly renovated in 1751 and fitted with a new (current) facade. • The double house on Nieuwe Herengracht 143 from 1720 has a sandstone façade with checkered corner
lesenes, sculpted middle engraving, with a raised straight frame with
corbels in the middle. == Famous residents ==