became the owner of an empty plot, now Prinsengracht 2-10; his heirs, two daughters who married
Samuel Blommaert and Isaac Coymans, sold the lots in 1617, 1618 and 1622. There are many monuments and monumental canal houses on the Prinsengracht, including: • A
crow-stepped gable on the corner with the Brouwersgracht at Prinsengracht 2–4. • The van Brienenhofje, or Rk. St Van Brienens Founded The Star at Prinsengracht 89–133. • A frame facade at Prinsengracht 124. • 't Casteel van Beveren from around 1720 at Prinsengracht 299. • The
Anne Frank House from 1635 with the Secret Annex from 1740 at Prinsengracht 263 (near the Westertoren), later internally connected to expanded museum space in the adjacent Prinsengracht 265-267. • 'De Roode Vos' with a clock gable at Prinsengracht 300. • The Palace of Justice from 1829 at Prinsengracht 436. • A typical example of a 19th-century so-called Ojief spout facade at Prinsengracht 556. • The Prinsengracht Hospital at Prinsengracht 769. • The best-preserved copy of five identical neck gables from 1701 at Prinsengracht 849. • The 17th-century
Deutzen Hofje at Prinsengracht 899.
Churches • Between Prinsengracht 16 and 18 - at Westerstraat - there is the
Noordermarkt with the
Noorderkerk built around 1623. • The
Westerkerk with the Westertoren on Prinsengracht 281 (on the Westermarkt). • Between Prinsengracht 1047 and 1049 - at the Utrechtsestraat - there is the Amstelveld with the special
Amstelkerk, built as a temporary ‘Wooden barn’ in 1670. • Prinsengracht 756 contains the
De Duif church building from 1858. (Until 1974 it was the Catholic Sint-Willibrorduskerk within the Veste.) File:Balthasar Florisz. van Berckenrode - Amsterdam (1625) 1-2.jpg|Map of Amsterdam by Balthasar Florisz. van Berckenrode (1625). Detail of the larger map with the still short Prinsengracht ending at the Leidsegracht (top center). File:Koppelaar cityscape.jpg|Prinsengracht with Westertoren, fall.
Frans Koppelaar ==Numbering and orientation ==