Jakoba Helena Mulder (2 March 1900 – 5 November 1988) was a Dutch architect and urban planner remembered for her designs of two large city parks and the creation of housing and play spaces in Amsterdam.
When she won a fire station design competition after graduation, her anonymously submitted design was praised for its 'masculine toughness.' The surprise was great when it turned out that the maker was a woman.In 1926, she was hired by the municipality of Delft to work as a deputy architect on several projects including expansion plans for the town.
In 1930, she joined the Amsterdam urban development department as an assistant to the urban development architect and supervising 30 male artists. There she worked for Theodoor K. van Lohuizen and Cornelis van Eesteren, among others.
Throughout her life, she was popularly known as "Miss of the Bos" because of her work and continuing interest in the design of the famously wooded park.
She therefore designed a system of hooks and courts: two L-shaped residential blocks that interlock. This resulted in a much more varied picture and more light in the houses. In addition, playgrounds were built in courtyards that mothers could see from the kitchen.Together van Eyck and Mulder collaborated on more than 700 play spaces in Amsterdam. One example of her play area design that remains today is the Gibraltar Street wading pool that Mulder designed and that still opens every summer.
In 1952 she was named chief architect of Amsterdam and in 1958 succeeded her mentor Cornelis van Eesteren to become head of the city's urban development department where she remained until her retirement in 1965.
She never married and even after retiring from her position with the city, she remained a professor of planning at the University of Amsterdam until her 70th birthday. During her time there, she actively encouraged young women to follow her into the design professions, as noted in a 1947 professional guide, "she praised the 'men's profession' of urban design as very suitable for women."
She was honored as a member of the Order of Orange-Nassau.
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