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Amsterdam · Museum Quarter

Vondelpark

Amsterdam's largest park at 47 hectares, and the city's living room.

Vondelpark, Amsterdam · Museum Quarter
Category
Park & Garden
Duration
2 hours
Best Time
Any time
Entry
Rating
4.7 (58,538)
The place

About Vondelpark

Amsterdam's largest park at 47 hectares, and the city's living room. On any warm day, half of Amsterdam is here: cycling through, having picnics, watching free performances at the open-air theatre in summer, or just lying in the grass staring at the sky. The park runs east-west, with the Museum Quarter at the eastern entrance and Oud-West along the southern edge. The rose garden has 70 species and peaks in June. The Blauwe Theehuis (Blue Tea House) in the center is the classic meeting spot.

The park was designed in 1865 as a private garden for wealthy residents, went public in the 1950s, and by the 1970s had become the legendary campsite and gathering place of the hippie trail. Today it is beautifully maintained. The ponds, bridges, and winding paths create the illusion of much more space than 47 hectares. The southern section near the music dome is the quietest. The western end has a large playground and paddling pool that fills up with families on warm weekends.

The Openluchttheater (Open Air Theatre) runs free concerts, comedy, and theatre performances from June through August, and it is one of Amsterdam's best-kept secrets. Shows range from classical music to hip-hop to children's theatre, and you simply show up and sit down. The park is also a legitimate cycling corridor. Thousands of commuters cut through it daily, so stick to the walking paths if you want to avoid becoming a speed bump. On King's Day (April 27), the park becomes Amsterdam's biggest outdoor party.

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The place

Getting there

Address
1071 AA Amsterdam, Netherlands
Neighborhood
Museum Quarter
Nearest Metro
Tram 2/5/12 to MuseumpleinTram 1 to Leidseplein (10-min walk)
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Enter from the Oud-West side (Vondelpark 3 entrance) for fewer crowds. The Openluchttheater has free concerts, comedy, and theatre from June through August, no tickets needed. The Blauwe Theehuis terrace fills up fast on sunny afternoons. Cycling through is fine, but walk the smaller paths for the rose garden and ponds. On warm days, grab supplies from Albert Heijn on Overtoom and have a picnic on the big meadow near the center.

Plan for about 2 hours.

Vondelpark is in the Museum Quarter neighborhood of Amsterdam. The address is 1071 AA Amsterdam, Netherlands. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Check the weather forecast and dress in layers, especially in shoulder seasons.

Around the corner

Nearby in Museum Quarter

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Museum

Rijksmuseum

The national museum of the Netherlands, and the Gallery of Honour is the reason to come. The long corridor of Golden Age masterpieces leads to Rembrandt's Night Watch at the far end, restored and rehung in 2023 in its own dedicated room with controlled lighting. Vermeer's Milkmaid and The Little Street are here too. The building itself, a Pierre Cuypers cathedral of art from 1885, is worth the visit for the architecture alone. The bike tunnel running through the building is pure Amsterdam. The collection spans 800 years, from medieval religious art through the Dutch Golden Age to 20th-century design, but the second floor is where you'll spend most of your time. The Vermeer room groups several paintings together, and after the 2023 exhibition that reunited nearly every Vermeer on earth, they've kept the improved display. The Delftware collection on the ground floor is unexpectedly fascinating, blue-and-white pottery telling the story of Dutch trade with China and Japan. Budget at least three hours. The museum is enormous (80 galleries, 8,000 objects on display) and trying to see everything in one visit will exhaust you. Instead, pick two or three periods that interest you and go deep. The Rijksmuseum gardens are free to enter and hide several sculptures and a nice cafe. The library reading room on the first floor, with its spiral staircase and floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, is one of the most photographed rooms in the Netherlands and completely free to walk into.

2-4 hoursExplore
Museum

Van Gogh Museum

The largest collection of Van Gogh's work on earth houses more than 200 paintings and 500 drawings, arranged in a chronological order that shows his style evolve from the dark potato-eating peasants of Nuenen to the swirling skies of Saint-Remy. The museum handles crowds by limiting entry to timed slots, but it often sells out weeks ahead. Booking the earliest morning slot (usually 9 AM) allows you to have the galleries nearly to yourself for the first 45 minutes. Begin on the second floor with the self-portraits and work down. The chronological layout is the primary point: you see him teaching himself to paint in the Netherlands, discovering colour in Paris, losing his mind in Arles, and producing his most notable work during his final years. The Bedroom at Arles, Sunflowers, Almond Blossom, and Wheatfield with Crows are all on display. The letters to his brother Theo are displayed alongside the paintings and provide context. You realize he wasn't some tortured genius working in isolation; he was a thoughtful, articulate person who analyzed his own process obsessively. The museum building was designed by Gerrit Rietveld in 1973 and is connected to a newer wing by Kisho Kurokawa. The temporary exhibitions on the ground floor are consistently good, usually pairing Van Gogh with his contemporaries or influences. The museum shop is genuinely good, offering products beyond the usual tote-bag-and-magnet range. Allow two to three hours for your visit. Tickets cost €20, and the Friday evening sessions run until 9 PM with a bar and a DJ in the lobby.

2-3 hoursExplore
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