Johannes Bernardus van Loghem

Johannes Bernardus (Han) van Loghem (1881–1940) was a Dutch architect, furniture designer and town planner.

According to the RKD he studied in Delft during the years 1905–1909 and was influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright and Hendrik Petrus Berlage.

[5] From 1917 to 1919 he was a member of the board of directors of the league of Dutch architects and he taught technical theory at the HBO in Amsterdam from 1916–1925.

In 1919 he was one of the founders (which included Berlage, Henriette Roland Holst, Clara Wichmann and the artist Theo van Doesburg) of the League of Revolutionary-Socialist Intellectuals.

Van Loghem became an ardent advocate of New Objectivity, which he explained in his book Bouwen/Bauen/Bâtir/Building (Amsterdam: Kosmos, 1932), and exemplified through his designs for private houses, such as ''t Kôrnegoar' in Hengelo (1933),[8] 'Knipscheer' in Waalre (1937) and 'Hartog' in Den Haag (1937).

Han van Loghem
House on the Nijlstraat in Haarlem , front doors in a block of houses designed by Van Loghem
His house called "Steenhaag" on the Spaarne , with the facades of Tuinwijk Zuid behind it