amsterdam canal painting
logo EA.com
bike-shadow
 
Amsterdam
CITY Guide
Sightseeing
 

 
Agoda Hotel booking
 
photo
 
Gay & Lesbian
Answers for Gay Youth
Answers for Young Lesbians
For Gay Boys Only
Gay-Youth-links
 
 
Free Translation provided courtesy of ALS
 
ALS Translation Agency
 

This web site is built and maintained with Apple computers

mac

Viewed best with Firefox or Safari browsers set on 1024 X 768 resolution

 

HOT girls & boys

amsterdam-house

enter

18 yr. and over only!

 
The Other Side Guide
 
Send Money From Around The World 24/7_1
 
RedLIGHT District & What You should know
 
extra
 
AUTOMATE your Links Pages with LinksManager.com!
 

 

 
 
 
 experience Amsterdam's
Cool things to see ... best  places to go!
 
On This Page:
 
Our best recommendations for what to see and do while your here.
 
 
What To See

map

Visit our new PHOTO GALLERY  "Amsterdam 360"

Hop-On-Hop-Off  Tours

Central Station, Dam square,
Royal Palace, Red light district,
Nemo science museum, Stedelijk museum
(temporary)
   
Rembrandt square, Flea market,
Jewish quarter, Rembrandt
house, Artis zoo, Skinny bridge,
Xtracold Amsterdam ICE BAR
   
Heineken experience, De pijp,
Albert Cuyp Market, Utrechtse
Straat (Shopping), Antique quarter
   
Vondelpark, Van Gogh Museum,
Rijksmuseum, Casino, Hard rock cafe,
PC Hooftstraat, Diamond Museum,
Diamond Factory
   
Anne Frank House, Westerchurch,
Jordaan, The 9 Streets,
Amsterdam tulip museum, Markets

f

f

The Anne Frank House

   NOT TO BE MISSED

The Anne Frank house is located at Prinsengracht 263. Just down Prinsengracht to the north past the Westerkerk-(West church) Open 09:00 Sundays 10:00 till 17:00 Summers 21:00 (9:00 PM). Purchase tickets for the Anne Frank House and Museum online

The wartime hiding place of the young Jewish girl and her family from July 1942 until the family was discovered in their refuge and turned in to the Nazis by a Nazi colaboratorjust before the end of the war on the 4th of August 1944. Only Otto Frank, Anne's father, survived. Anne's diary, published after her death, gave a name and a face to the Jewish children who perished in the Nazi Holocaust.

Anne Frank died at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in March 1945, liberation just days away.  Her father was the families only survivor. Returning to Amsterdam after liberation and living here until his death in 1982.

The discovery and publishing of "The Diary of Anne Frank" occurred after the war in 1947.

The original book title in Dutch is "Het Achterhuis".

This young girls moving account of courage, dreams, and hope continues inspiring readers, young and old, to this day.

Purchase tickets for the Anne Frank House and Museum online

 

 

f

Advertise on Experience Amsterdam.com

f

The Begijnhof find it on our walk around town

Amsterdam has hundreds of `hofjes', or what is commonly know as a garden  or a courtyard, hidden away between and behind most Amsterdam buildings and houses.

The Begijnhof Located at the at the Spui is one of the largest, and well known, but also one of the more striking. It is remarkable that such an oasis of peace can be so close to the bustling heart of the city. There is a doorway in the row of houses to the north on the Spui that leads you there, with its lovely English chapel with pulpit panels designed by the artist Mondriaan, and the oldest house in the city (1475), one of Amsterdam's few surviving wooden houses.

If you turn left out of the other entrance, you will go in the direction of the Amsterdam Historical Museum, and its free gallery of old paintings.  

f

ARTIS ZOO

Artis Zoo           

Plantage Middelan.

The five elements that make up present day Artis are each represented in the logo: Artis as a Zoo and Aquarium, Botanical gardens, Zoological Museum, Geological Museum and Planetarium. This unique combination meets Artis's primary objective: offering educational material to broad segments of the population. Material that deals with our planet Earth as a unique place in the universe, worthy of the greatest care and respect.

Artis, the Royal Zoological Society 'Natura Artis Magistra', was founded on 1 May 1838, at the initiative of the book dealer G.F.Westerman. Its purpose was: 'to promote the knowledge of Natural History, in a clear and agreeable way; both by assembling an extensive collection of living animals and by displaying mounted exhibits from the animal kingdom.' In the first half of the 19th century, the combination of a zoo, scientific collections, a Zoological Laboratory and Museum as well as the academically exceptional Artis Library, was quite unique.
Since 1988 visitors to Artis have free access to the Zoological Museum's exhibition halls. The addition of the Planetarium (1988) and the Geological Museum (1992) completes Artis's story on life. The presentations in the Planetarium take audiences on a fascinating trip through time, right back to the birth of the universe itself. The Geological Museum shows how the Earth has developed and provides insights into the ancient ancestors of present day life forms.

Artis Enterance to Zoo

Artists' inspiration
Numerous generations of artists have been inspired by Artis, and to this very day students from various art colleges can be found honing their skills at the animals. One of the greatest of these was Jaap Kaas (1898-1972), whose life-size Pot-bellied pig can be found at the Children's farm. It is under the watchful eye of the bronze Keeper (1988) by Arie Teeuwisse, Kaas's best-known student, himself the mentor of Hetty Heyster, who created the enormous Gorilla with young (1993) and the two cheetahs near the African Savannah. Other sculptors have created a deer, a snake, sea lions, a bonobo, even dinosaurs. In addition, wild, captivating statues created by African sculptors from Tengenenge, Zimbabwe, take the form of glistening shapes rendered in dark serpentine. In short, besides a garden of animals, plants, rocks and stars, there is an entire zoological garden of ceramics, stone and bronze.

Open 09:00/17:00 the cost is about €18

How to get there by train and Canal boat!
Artis express poster..arive to the zoo by boat
   
Advice to potential car drivers
The best way to visit Artis Royal Zoo in the heart of Amsterdam is by NS' train (Dutch Railways), tram, metro or canal boat. We would advise you to avoid coming by car to Amsterdam. The Artis Car Park has a permit for a only a limited amount of cars. Parking rates elsewhere in Amsterdam are extremely high, and cars are towed away or wheel clamped if your ticket is overdue. Driving a car in Amsterdam is not adviseable as the streets of Amsterdam are narrow and crowded.

http://www.artis.nl/international/

f

HortisHORTIS

Hortus (Horticultural) Botanicus Gardens Amsterdam

"The Hortus"

The Hortus Botanicus Amsterdam is one of the oldest botanic gardens in the world. Today, there are more than 4,000 plant species growing in the garden and greenhouses. The Hortus is located in the Plantage district on the edge of the hectic center of Amsterdam. Behind the 300-year-old gates, however, the bustle of the city seems to disappear.

Originally, the Hortus was a medicinal herb garden, founded in 1638 by the Amsterdam City Council. At that time, herbs were of vital importance as the basis of medicines and the city had just experienced a plague epidemic. Doctors and pharmacists trained in the preparation of prescriptions at the Hortus.

Thanks to the ships of the Dutch East India Company (Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie, VOC), the Hortus expanded quickly in the 17th and 18th Centuries. The VOC ships brought not only herbs and spices, but also exotic ornamental plants. In fact, a few of the Hortus' 'crown jewels' date from that time, e.g. the 300-year-old Eastern Cape giant cycad.


Plant

The Orangery at "The Hortus"ORANGRY Cafe'


The Orangery is located in the middle of this living museum and possesses one of the most beautiful outdoor cafés in Amsterdam. After an extensive renovation, it reopened late in 2003. Now, in addition to its function as café, the Orangery rents two assembly rooms for exclusive parties and meetings.

This gorgeous museum café is located right in the middle of the Hortus Botanicus. Surrounded by numerous rare and exotic plants, it is one of the most beautiful outdoor cafés in Amsterdam. During the day, visitors to the Hortus can enjoy a delicious cup of coffee, Holtkamp pastries, and tasty sandwiches and salads. All of the dishes on the menu consist of pure organic ingredients. The Orangery is also an attractive venue for exclusive parties, receptions, and dinners and it is possible to hold meetings or give presentations there. Moreover, since January 2008, the city of Amsterdam allows couples to exchange wedding vows in the Hortus' Orangery.

Click HERE for more information about prices, possibilities, and the availability of rooms in the Orangery.

The Orangery is a centuries-old national monument. In fact, tropical plants were already cultivated in wooden greenhouses on this spot in 1715. The current Orangery building was built in 1875 as a lecture hall. The name Orangery refers to the early function as a storage place for citrus plants (in particular, orange trees) during winter time.

Orangry

Just a short walk to the East from Waterlooplein opens 9:00/ on weekends at 11:00 till 17:00/5:00 PM. A Small but beautiful garden NOT TO BE MISED IF OUR GREEN WORLD IS ON YOUR MIND ...Or you just like truly beautiful places

f

Amsterdam Brewery: Free tours of the Brouwerij ‘t Ij

Amsterdam's Brouwerij ‘t Ij offers free tours on Fridays. Photos by Audrey Sykes.

Amsterdam's Brouwerij ‘t Ij offers free tours on Fridays. Photos by Audrey Sykes.

By Audrey Sykes in Amsterdam

Amsterdam’s “Brouwerij ‘t Ij” brewery has been serving up a selection of Belgian-style organic brews since 1985. Located in an eastern corner of the city, the brewery is worth the trip for those seeking flavorful, fresh beer at a surprisingly low cost.

Plus, if you swing by Brouwerij ‘t Ij on Fridays, you can take a free guided tour!

History a-brewing

The Brouwerij ‘t Ij stands beside an enormous, classic Dutch windmill once used for grinding oats. (Now a private residence, the windmill serves as a helpful landmark for those looking for the brewery.) As for the brewery, it was once a large bathhouse, yet the only remains of its soapy past are the old tiled walls inside.

The brewery was founded by Kasper Peterson, a Dutch citizen who spent years as a “beer engineer” in Belgium. Peterson’s first beer creation was the floral, blonde tripel named Zatte, a Dutch term for being “a bit drunk” — and still available on tap.

While the Brouwerij ‘t Ij’s logo is a humorous cartoon ostrich standing in a desert with a windmill in the background, the name “Brouwerij ‘t Ij” literally translates to “brewery on the Ij” due to its location near the Ij River.

The brewery produces only about 200,000 liters per year, a small amount compared to Heineken’s massive 220 million liters.

Cozy and beer buzzy

An assortment of beer enthusiasts flock to the “‘t Ij” brewery on sunny, warm weekends to sample the beers, snack away, and chill out. Tourists, locals, and families brew up a chatty environment, and the staff is a friendly bunch of connoisseurs who honestly enjoy their job. It’s a relaxed and pleasing setting for even the quietest of introverts: everyone has a new best friend after a few rounds at Brouwerij ‘t Ij.

Inside, the decor includes a sizable collection of beer bottles from around the world. Old photos of windmills, ostriches, random faces, and news clippings are pinned above the beer-logged tables. (There will never be enough coasters to keep the counters clean, so stay outside if you can’t handle the scent of stale beer!)

A pure and simple beer recipe

Regardless of beer type, the Brouwerij ‘t Ij’s recipes strictly adhere to just three organic ingredients: water, hops, and malted barley. Yeast acts as a natural preservative and filtering system, making additives unnecessary, and giving the beer a cloudy, smooth, and frothy body.

Following the introduction of “Zatte,” Brouwerij ‘t Ij has added six Belgian-style beers available on tap year-round, plus a few seasonal specials. The list includes:

So many choices...

So many choices...

Plzen:  A light Czech pilsner. Cost: €1.90. (ABV: 5%)
Natte:  Dubbel and mildly bitter. Cost: €2.20. (ABV: 6.5%)
Ijwit:  Citrusy wheat beer. Cost: €2.20. (ABV: 7%)
Zatte:  Tripel with a floral aroma. Cost: €2.20. (ABV: 8%)
Columbus:  Bittersweet amber. Cost: €2.40. (ABV: 9%)
Struis:  Dark stout-like ale. Cost: €2.70. (ABV: 9%)

The Brouwerij ‘t Ij will be interesting to anyone who considers themselves a beer devotee. It will be enjoyed by anyone who wants to sample the Dutch tradition of sipping something bubbly while relaxing in the sun with friends.

Free tours every Friday

Guided tours revealing the ins and outs of the brewery are offered for free on Fridays by the current brewmaster. Tours start at 4 PM.

And don’t worry–you won’t go hungry. Trappist cheeses dipped in beer, sliced salami meats, and local sheep cheeses are a few of the snacks served while sipping the aromatic brews.

Brouwerij ‘t Ij
Funenkade 7
Transportation: Tram 10 and 14
Phone +31(0) 20 6228325
Open: 3 PM – 8 PM

More information is available on the brewery’s website.

f

Jewellery for men

f

Museums: The Big 3 + 1*

  (* we love the most)   Additional Museums of interest

For a small city, Amsterdam is home to many world-class museums. The three major museums, the Rijksmuseum, the Stedelijk (modern art)  and the van Gogh. All three are situated around the Museumplein.

   Experience... Amsterdam's best museums

The Rijksmuseum  A Large museum containing paintings by some of the Netherlands' great 17th century painters such as RembrandtVermeer and van Hals. The Nightwatch by Rembrandt is their prize piece. Contains many artifacts as well as paintings.

The Stedelijk Museum. Major collection of modern art. Touring collections are featured regularly.

The NEW van Gogh Museum . Recently renovated and expanded, dedicated to Vincent van Gogh and his contemporaries.

* Rembrandt's House At Jodenbreestraat 4-6. Easy to find, located just around the corner from the Waterlooplein.      

f

Canal trips

For a special canal boat tour

It's worthwhile taking a canal boat tour to see beautiful Amsterdam from the water. They last about 90 minutes, and take you around the city and through the harbor. You can buy your tickets and go aboard on Damrak by Central Station, and Rokin by the Spui.

If you're feeling energetic, you can hire a Canal Bike from one of the several points through the city at Westerkerk, Leidseplein, Leidsestraat, Rijksmuseum, and take your own route. But so you don't get lost, bring your map.

For a special experience take a boat tour with us.

There are also electric boats to hire at the Nieuwmarkt on the Kloveniersburgwal, at the corner of Leidsestraat and  Prinsengracht, and at the other end of the Kloveniersburgwal near the Munt tower.

f

f

If your kids are 16 they can drink beer LEGALLY in public cafe's and restaurants in the Netherlands. No fear of the police arresting you! Freedom, what a concept!

Heineken brings you a new experience with their NEW redesigned brewery museum and technical tour. A favorite place for young and old but you must be 18 to drink beer here or you'll have to bring your dad!

Stadhooouderskade 78 1072 AE Amsterdam NL + 31 (0)20 523 9666

Open Tuesday through Sunday 10:00 - 18:00 hrs ( 6:00) last ticket sales at 17:00hrs (5:00) closed monday

f

Climbing the walls in Amsterdam?

climb Klimhal Amsterdam

Beginner or advanced climbing enthusiasts will find this venue offers a good variety of challenges and a full line of professional services

Naritaweg 48 Amsterdam +31(0)20 681 0121 info@klimhalamsterdam.nl

f

Advertise on Experience Amsterdam.com

Visit our new PHOTO GALLERY  "Amsterdam 360"

f

Things to do for Free, or almost free...

Amsterdam is a great city for the frugal or budget minded traveler and resident alike. Being a small city in area it is easy to cover all parts of the city and surroundings by walking, bicycle or low cost trams. 

A feast for the eyes at almost every turn ...you don't have to spend a lot to enjoy a lot of our charming city. A few suggestions here will get you started...

Take the free commuter ferry behind central station to the other side of the IJ river and go for a walk along the North Holland Canal.  

Walk up the roof stairs of the New Metropolis NEMO located near Amsterdam C S (central station) and admire the view of the city. Walk east from ACS, and cross the footbridge to the big green building that looks like a big copper ship, coming out of the sea...bow first. Go to the Begijnhof the entrance is from the Spui. Visit the Historical Ship Museum gallery. Take the other exit from the Begijnhof and turn left.

Wander along the Flower Market on the Singel.

Browse the Waterlooplein market at the Waterlooplein. Lots of used stuff, but there is always the possibility of a treasure to be found amongst all the junk. Visit the Albert Cuyp market take tram to the east 10 to Frederiksplein, or 4, 16, 24, 25 to Albert Cuyp straat. Go to a free lunch concert in the Concertgebouw at the opposite end of the Museumplein from the Rikesmuseum.

Browse the Internet FOR FREE at the award winning Internet Reading Table in medieval surroundings at the Waag located in the Old Centre at Nieuwmarkt in the... 

RedLIGHT District Warning: adults only

De Waag, Nieuwmarkt ("Old Center" in the RedLight district) http://www.waag.org/

Another Free Idea:  Go up the tower to the cafe in the Kalvertoren shopping mall, and admire the view. It's at Kalverstraat near the Munt. Go to the cafe in the Metz and admire the view on the corner of Leidsestraat and Keizersgracht.

f

book Amsterdam hotels

f

VondelparkVondel Park pond Amsterdam

Vondel Park The the largest and the most popular park in Amsterdam. At the narrow end of the park (North end) is the front entrance and the Leidseplein. To the East are the big museums, Museumplein, and the Concergebow (Concerthall).

summer concert Vondel Park Amsterdam

Vondel Park

For a very unique view of the park with an inventive interactive map Visit Project Waag.  at http://project.waag.org/parq/vondelpark.htm

or simply click on this map

vondelpark map

biking in vondelpark

During the "Peace Movement" years of war protests in the late sixties and seventies, the park developed into a large hippie commune. It still retains some of that spirit till this day. Alive with skaters, joggers, all sorts of street performers, sports and activities of every imaginable sort, entertaining the crowds. Imagin Venice Beach without the beach and ocean smell but with the smell of "fresh cut grass".   

Wander around...rent some in-line skates at the far end South entrance of the park. Or sit by the lanes and enjoy the best people-watching anywhere.

Lots of food stands around and conventional places to eat and drink in the park, each with their own outside terrace of course.
One of our favorite places is Vertigo which offers good food at reasonable prices and is located under the FilmMuseum, another jewel in the park's crown of activities.

The "Vondelpark" is by far the most popular with visitors and locals alike especially popular on those l o n g summer days. No matter when you visit Amsterdam just a stroll through Vondelpark will usually brighten your day a bit.

Outdoor concerts are FREE and are held in the summer the Vondelpark Open Air Theater (Openluchttheater) - stages regular performances. June through August www.openluchttheater.nl

For other Festivals during the year you might want to enjoy check out our Festival page

...more City Parks

 
f

f

For Trips Outside the City? 
...you really don't need a car in Holland

During spring and tulip season flower lovers can take a coach trip to Keukenhof, huge gardens exclusively dedicated to tulips.

Not far from Amsterdam, in the former Zuiderzee (now the IJsselmeer) is Marken. An island now joined to the mainland by a land bridge. It still has many wooden houses, and you can still see people wearing local costume, not just for tourists. You should at least visit the harbor.

A great experience is an adventure to Castricum. It takes about 30 minutes to get there by train.

At Castricum station you can rent a bike (phone 0251-654035 to reserve one). In the station restaurant you can buy a map and buy a €2.50 entrance card to the miles of bike paths through beautiful woodlands, meadows, and dunes, with access down to the beach.

This is also the water treatment filter for Amsterdam's drinking water. You can see huge carp swimming about in the crystal-clear pools. but "No Fishing" allowed.

Visit Haarlem ...a truly historic city only a short drive down the highway for Amsterdam

Haarlem Holland

By train just 20 km and 15 minutes West of Amsterdam, Haarlem is one of the true Netherlands gems, located between the coastal dunes and the Haarlemmermeer in the province of North Holland. This historic town on the River Spaarne has clung to its ancient character more than any other town in the Randstad (Rim City), the great conurbation also known as the big village that stretches south from Amsterdam to Rotterdam embracing The Hague, Leiden, Utrecht, Delft and Gouda.

Haarlem is the 13th largest town in Holland and covers a surface of 32.1 km², of which 8% is covered with water. Nearly 150,000 inhabitants live in the capital of the North Holland province with 20% of the population being of foreign extraction.

It has been the historical center of the tulip bulb-growing district for centuries and for this reason bears the nickname 'Bloemenstad' (flower city). The municipality of Haarlem also comprises part of the village Spaarndam, a newer housing estate forming part of the municipality of Haarlemmerliede en Spaarnwoude.

The name Haarlem comes from 'Haarlo-heim', which meant village on higher ground. It all started with some hunters' encampments on a beachhead on the western coast of Holland, at the intersection of an old overland trade route and a corner of a large lake giving easy access to inland waterways. The motto of Haarlem is "Vicit vim virtus", which is Latin for Virtue conquered force.

Once the seat of the Dukes of Holland, Haarlem went from being a mediaeval court with squabbling nobles to being an important centre for beer brewing and the linen and silk trades, drawing enormously on the expertise brought to the town by Flemings (fleeing the Eighty Years War) from the end of the 16th century onwards.

The latter part of the 19th century saw much new development with residential areas, such as the Rozenprieel and Leidsebuurt, being built. There were also improvements in public health and transport and in 1899 Holland's first electric tram ran in Haarlem.
Once you are in the old city at the Grote Markt, a central square with elegant Renaissance and Gothic architecture, there are many side streets to discover filled with galleries, antiques shops and cafés.


What could be so interesting about Haarlem?

Haarlem landmarks

3500 B.C. Stone axes found from this period.

2000 B.C. First evidence of settlement in the Randstad area.

ca 50 B.C. The Romans establish a fort in Velsen.

918 AD The name 'Haarlem' first appears.

1245 Count William II declares Haarlem a city.

1300 Work starts on the St Bavo Cathedral on the main square.

1395 The first 'hofjes' (courtyard houses) in Holland are built for the poor by Dirk van Bakenes.

1430 Refugee Fleming Laurens Coster invents printing in Haarlem (according to inhabitants).

1572 Siege of Haarlem by the Spanish which lasts seven months before Haarlem capitulates.

1656 Abraham Casteleyn prints the first newspaper in Europe in Haarlem.

1811 Emperor Napoleon makes a visit to Haarlem.

1813 Haarlem established as the capital of the province 'Holland'.

1899 The first electric tram in Holland runs in Haarlem.

1945 Hannie Schaft, a resistance heroine, is murdered by order of the Gestapo.

1995 Haarlem celebrates its 750th anniversary as a city.

f

For these and other special places not far from Amsterdam

windmill

consider expanding your horizons and exploring some other Dutch treasures

From a few hours to a few days see the possibilities...

f

The National Park Hoge Veluwe

Beautiful surroundings, and free bikes at the gates to cycle thorough the grounds. In the middle is the modern art museum Kröller-Müller with a major  collection of works by Van Gogh, Seurat, Redon, Braque, Picasso, Juan Gris, Mondriaan and  others. There is an excellent statue garden too. The NS Railways have a day trip that takes you nearby by train takes about an hour from Amsterdam, and then by bus to the gates of the park.

f

Windmills

There is a community of working windmills along the river at the Zaanse Schans, as well as  museums and a cheese factory you can visit. Take the train to Koog-Zaandijk (about 15 minutes), turn left at the bottom of the steps from the platform, and walk straight on right to the  end of the street (about 5 minutes). Turn left, and ahead of you is a windmill at the end of a bridge. As you cross the bridge, you can see the working mills on the left. There is a gate at the end of the bridge, on the left.

f

Tourist offices in the Netherlands are called VVV. The main one in Amsterdam is opposite the Central Station with a second office on Platform 1 in the station. There is also a smaller branch at the Leidseplein. There are a number of tour organizers on the Damrak, near Central Station.

f

What's going on in town right NOW?   

Not surprisingly, there is an immense choice of activities in the city. You can find a list of what's  on this week hanging in most cafés, and in newspapers published Wednesday night and Thursday morning.

There is a central entertainment information and ticket reservation service called AUB the acronym for "Amsterdam Uit (Out) Bureau" on the "Leidseplein" across the street from the American Hotel.

They have a Web Site at http://www.aub.nl There is also an English Language guide to the week's events called What's On. It is published by the VVV and is available at their office's and in most hotels.

Music & Clubs      Museums       Walking Around Town     Private Tours     

 RedLight District / Escorts / Girls and Boys  Warning: adults only

f

melkweg  melkweg

Located near the Leidseplein.

For youthful contemporary music check out these venues  more music details 

f

The legendary music venue paradiso

 

PARIDISO open Wednesday through Sunday. Always popular but can be crowded Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. mixed dress anything goes young crowd pack the place to party hard with future funk, hip-hop, big-beat, and classic house. Located near the Leidseplein.

Discos at Rozengracht, near Westerkerk, and ODEON at the opposite the end of the Spui.

More music details

f

Opera and Symphony

For opera it's the Muziektheater at Waterlooplein

The International Opera Center is located at Kloveniersvoorburgwal 87 (just down the canal from the Nieumarkt in the RedLight district)

More music details

f

Movies

There are more than 55 cinema screens in Amsterdam.  You will find the list of current films hanging in most cafes. Non-Dutch  films are always subtitled, so you can always see films in English. There are many cinemas around the Leidseplein and the Rembrandtplein. On Fridays and Saturdays you should buy your ticket early. You can do this by telephone if you like.

The Netherlands Film Museum has a wonderful cafe' with a sunny terrace at  Vondelpark 3 (near the main park entrance at Stadhouderskade)

Amsterdam's film lovers cinema only screens classic films.

The experience of viewing a film here is a truly pleasurable event especially for film buffs. The cinema's are small in capacity but large in seating comfort. The sound system is superior. The most important ingredient is the "respectful of others" audience. ie. Not much talking during the film except for the emotional utterances encouraged by the film itself and our movie lover obsession of watching the credits ALL THE WAY TO THE END is properly respected.

One more thing to mention is the varied selection of marvelous films that the museum brings back to our lives.

There are at least two magnificent art deco cinemas you should try not to miss: The Tuschinski near the Rembrandtplein. Screen 1 is the most impressive.

And "The Movies" on the Haarlemmerstraat near the Jordaan.

The Movies
Haarlemmerdijk 161 Amsterdam, +31 020 638 60 16

The Movies has a good restaurant too.

Website in (Dutch) http://www.themovies.nl/over-de-movies

f

An online list and reviews of most museums in Amsterdam visit our Museums page

f

Join us on the bicycle lanes and see Amsterdam the Dutch way >>   Bike rentals and bike tours

f

(Tribune Media Services) -- I've found vacation nirvana for teenagers and it's a place parents will like just as much as teens do. AMSTERDAM

  • By Eileen Ogintz
    Tribune Media Services

    Amsterdam offers a good mix of culture, history and quirkiness
    The Anne Frank House is one of the city's top tourist attractions for all ages
    The Amsterdam Card gives visitors discounted access to many attractions

Welcome to Amsterdam. Its got everything, including teen-safe clubs, terrific outdoor markets that, despite the weak dollar, offer some bona-fide bargains, world-class museums and the chance to explore it all by bicycle.

In Amsterdam, everyone seems young, fit and, most important to the teens, hip. And there's the appropriate mix of culture, history and quirkiness in a city where marijuana can be purchased legally in coffeehouses and the Red Light District is historic and attracts group tours. Another plus: everyone speaks flawless English (www.visitamsterdam.nl). (Getting there: OpenSkies, the new premium transatlantic airline from British Airways, has just begun flying from New York to Amsterdam and is offering new PREM PLUS fares for $499 each way, offering many of the amenities of business class at a significantly lower price.)

We settled into the Ambassador Hotel, which quickly became one of our all-time favorites. Within walking distance of just about everywhere we want to go, the 59-room hotel is a series of 10 renovated 17th-century canal houses overlooking one of Amsterdam's famous canals. We can't believe our food choices within a couple of blocks -- Italian, Japanese, Thai, Indonesian, French.

The next day, a short walk from the hotel, I buy tulip bulbs at Amsterdam's famous flower market from Ron Abel, a man whose family has been in business here for more than 50 years. The girls -- my 17-year-old daughter and her friend, Hayley Jacobs -- are amused by the marijuana lollipops sold alongside the tulip bulbs. Everywhere we look there are narrow streets with cafes, shops and people whizzing by on bikes. (We quickly learn that bikers have the right of way.) We laugh at how some of the historic houses lean in a bit -- on purpose we learn. And I'm amazed to learn that Amsterdam has about 1,200 bridges along its 80 miles of canals.

The girls love Amsterdam -- the charm, the vibe and the fact that its famous artists, including Rembrandt, Van Gogh and Vermeer, are familiar to them. Amsterdam is the ideal city to combine fun, history, culture and good eats, we decide, as we linger over dinner at d'Vijff Vlieghen, a restaurant that occupies adjoining 17th-century houses and specializes in New Dutch cuisine. Another night, we head for celebrity chef Jamie Oliver's oh-so-hip Fifteen, one of four Fifteen restaurants in Europe that gives disadvantaged young people professional training.

We're glad we've got the Amsterdam Card, which gives us access to museums and a host of other discounts that save us significant bucks. The teens love the flea markets and vintage shops like Episode. We even get into a discussion about American politics with the vendor at the Waterlooplein Flea Market who sells the girls sweatshirts -- at a good price, they assure me.

We tour Rembrandt's house, which he bought in 1639 at the height of his fame. But there was sadness here too -- his young wife died, as did three of his children soon after they were born, and ultimately he went bankrupt. The house is furnished with items and works of art from his time, including the kinds of tools Rembrandt used for his famous etchings. There are also demonstrations of how he made his own paints in his studio.

We join the crowd at the Anne Frank House (save time by getting tickets online), one of Amsterdam's top tourist attractions. The visit is sobering. Anne Frank, of course, is the Jewish girl who went into hiding with her family during the German occupation of the Netherlands in World War II. While in hiding, Anne documented her family's hardships in her now famous diary. After two years, the inhabitants of the "secret annex," were discovered and sent to concentration camps. Only Otto Frank, Anne's father, survived. Anne's diary, published after her death, gave a name and a face to the Jewish children who perished in the Nazi Holocaust.

There are photographs, letters, and even some of the pictures that Anne pasted up on the walls. Later in the day, we gain even more perspective when we visit the Jewish Historical Museum. The building, which once housed four synagogues, is now home to an important collection of paintings and ceremonial objects looted by the Nazis during the war. Interactive computer stations let you hear the stories of survivors. Of the 25,000 Dutch Jews who went into hiding during World War II, 18,000 survived. There is also a wonderful kindermuseum designed to give children an idea of what it means to be Jewish in Holland. Even for those who aren't Jewish, a visit to both museums should be on every family's list when they visit Amsterdam.

On a lighter note, a visit to the Pancake Bakery is a must. It's just down the street from the Anne Frank House in an old warehouse originally owned by the Dutch East India Company. Owner Bastiaan Schaafsma, who grew up in the apartment upstairs when his parents ran the restaurant, explains that Dutch pancakes -- often eaten for dinner -- are much lighter than American pancakes and thinner, filled with all varieties of cheese, ham, vegetables and meat, as well as sweets (the banana and apple are especially good.) It's easy to see why this place is so popular!

The next day, we head to Museumplein to visit two of Amsterdam's most famous museums and top attractions -- the Rijksmuseum is home to the famous 17th-century dollhouses and many masterpieces, including Rembrandt's "The Night Watch," in which the artist created a portrait of soldiers in action in a way that had never before been captured.

A few blocks away is the Van Gogh Museum, which houses the largest Van Gogh collection in the world -- more than 200 paintings. The works are arranged chronologically, which helps the girls gain some understanding of the artist's art and troubled life.

After so much culture, the girls decide a little shopping therapy is in order, so we head over to the Albert Cuyp Outdoor Market, which stretches for a half-mile. You can buy anything here from cheese to dresses, suitcases to socks, fish to nail polish to fresh orange juice and birdcages. The market is packed with locals doing their Saturday shopping. Afterward, we head to Bazar, a lively local haunt for a terrific (and relatively cheap) Middle Eastern lunch.

Touring is exhausting and on our hour-long canal tour, presented in several different languages, including English, the girls fall asleep. But that doesn't dim their enthusiasm for Amsterdam a bit. Next time, they say on the way to the airport, we've got to stay longer.

(For more Taking the Kids, visit www.takingthekids.com, where Eileen Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.)

Copyright 2007 EILEEN OGINTZ, DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

Advertise on Experience Amsterdam.com
 
Viator
 

 

top
 
download manager
 
 © 2009 - www.experienceamsterdam.com   ©
This Website created by ~ Driftwood Harbor  - Artistic Design & Copywriting Services Company of Amsterdam Netherlands ~ 1998-2009
 
>