REM Eiland
Restaurant and bar perched on a former offshore pirate broadcasting platform, now permanently moored in the Houthaven harbor in west Amsterdam.
About REM Eiland
Restaurant and bar perched on a former offshore pirate broadcasting platform, now permanently moored in the Houthaven harbor in west Amsterdam. The structure is an old oil-rig-style platform that was used in 1964 to broadcast pirate TV and radio signals before the Dutch government shut it down. They towed it into Amsterdam harbor, put a kitchen on it, and turned it into one of the city's most unusual dining spots.
You climb the metal stairs (or take the small elevator) to the restaurant level, which sits about 22 meters above the water. The panoramic views of the IJ, the city skyline, and the NDSM wharf across the water are spectacular, especially at sunset. The interior is industrial-maritime, all steel and glass, with the original broadcasting equipment preserved as decoration. On the upper deck there's an open-air terrace that functions as a cocktail bar in summer.
The food is modern Dutch-international: seafood, steaks, and seasonal dishes that are solid without being groundbreaking. You come for the setting, not the cuisine. A main course runs €25-35, cocktails are €12-14. The location in Houthaven is about a 15-minute walk from Central Station along the waterfront, or you can take the bus. It's best visited on a clear evening when you can sit on the upper deck and watch the sun drop behind the harbor cranes. The story of the pirate broadcasting platform adds a layer of Amsterdam counterculture history that makes the whole experience more interesting than just another waterfront restaurant.
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