Waterpoort (Antwerp)

The Waterpoort (also known as Porta Regia, and Coninckxpoort) is a monumental gate located in the Zuiderdokken, Zuid Antwerp, Belgium.

The Waterpoort was erected in 1624,[3][4][2] and originally served as a water gate on the Scheldt river, functioning as a passage to the river from the fortified wall that protected the city of Antwerp,[3] through which boats could get to the Vlasmarkt from the Scheldt side.

[4] Inscriptions on both sides of the gate indicate this early function, as well as its role as an honorary arch to King Philip IV of Spain.

[2][4] The gate's design has been attributed to Peter Paul Rubens, although, as opposed to the identity of the sculptors (Huibrecht van den Eynde and Johannes van Mildert), there is no hard evidence of Rubens' involvement.

When, in 1933, the entrance building of the new Sint-Anna pedestrian tunnel had to be built in that location, the gate was moved again.

Waterpoort on the Gedempte Zuiderdokken, seen from the Kasteelstraat.
Waterpoort