At the bottom of the Zeedijk and bordering the Red Light District lies Nieuwmarkt Square and the brooding Waag, or weigh house, a former city gate. The area has been a marketplace since the 17th century, with vendors selling cheese, herbs, cloth, and fish, as well as spices brought back from the ships of the Dutch East India Company. Public executions and other gruesome punishments took place here as well, supplying cadavers to the Surgeon's Guild for dissection. (This is where Rembrandt came to watch Professor Tulp in action before painting The Anatomy Lesson.) During WWII, the Nieuwmarkt was known for a flourishing black market and as a collection point where Jews were held before being shipped off to concentration camps. Today it's a popular square, ringed by restaurants and cafés. There's a farmers' market every Saturday and occasional antiques and curiosities sales. After the hustle and bustle of the Red Light District, this square and the neighborhood around it are a refreshing break. Due east is a cluster of less-touristy, canal-lined streets (the Rechtboomssloot is especially scenic). Directly south, straight up the Kloveniersburgwal, is the University of Amsterdam, in myriad lovely old buildings along and between the canals.

Things to Do

Shopping

De Hoed van Tijn

You'll feel like you've traveled back to the Roaring '20s when entering this hat shop, with its flapper-style cloches, flatcaps, and fedoras...

Patta

Named after the Surinamese slang for "shoes," this boutique sells an exclusive selection of sneakers from brands such as adidas, Puma, Nike...

Dining

Café Bern

This dark, woody, and well-loved café—as cozily cluttered as a Jan Steen painting seen through a ’70s filter—has been serving the same simple...

Hemelse Modder

This bright and stylish restaurant is on one of the city's broadest canals and has a long-standing reputation for high quality at a great price...

Restaurant-Café In de Waag

The lofty wood-beam interior of the 15th-century Waag (weigh house), converted into a café and restaurant, is lighted by hundreds of candles...

Song Kwae

This conveniently located Thai restaurant offers speedy service and quality food at a good price for Amsterdam. In addition to the traditional...

Other

Allard Pierson Museum

Once the repository of the nation's gold supply, this former National Bank with its stern Neoclassical facade is now home to archaeological...

Amstelhoeck

Jutting out of the music theater Stopera, this grand café is the perfect point for a pre- or post-performance drink or bar snack with views...

Antiquariaat A. Kok & Zn

This antiquarian's heaven, housed in a former department store, offers five floors of treasures on Amsterdam history. Specialties of this family...

Café Cuba

This always-lively Nieuwmarkt mainstay serves relatively cheap cocktails and with a jazzy electronic sound track. On sunny days you can enjoy...

Candy Freaks

Whatever your dietary restrictions—from sugar- or gluten-free to organic, vegan, and halal—you will find something to hit your sweet spot here...

Cotton Club

Fans of more traditional jazz should check out this legendary venue, named for Surinamese trumpet player Teddy Cotton, who started the place...

De Waag

Built in 1488, the Waag functioned as a city gate, Sint Antoniespoort, until 1617. It would be closed at exactly 9:30 pm to keep out not only...

GASSAN Headquarters

By the beginning of the 18th century, Amsterdam had a virtual monopoly in the diamond industry in Europe, so when diamonds were discovered in...

Huis De Pinto

Jewish financier, economist, and scholar Isaac de Pinto was a significant investor in the Dutch East Indies Company and bought this house in...

Jacob Hooy & Co.

Filled with teak-wood canisters and jars bearing Latin inscriptions, fragrant with the perfume of seeds, flowers, and medicinal potions, this...

Lokaal 't Loosje

Artists, students, and businesspeople unite in this popular brown café installed in a building from 1900 that used to be a waiting room for...

Montelbaanstoren

Rembrandt loved to sketch this slightly leaning redbrick tower, which was built in 1516 as part of the city's defenses. In 1606, the Dutch sculptor...

Mozes en Aäronkerk

Landmarking the eastern corner of the Waterlooplein, this structure once had a warehouse facade to disguise its function as a clandestine Catholic...

Museum het Rembrandthuis

This is the house that Rembrandt, flush with success, bought for 13,000 guilders (a princely sum) in 1639, and where he lived and worked until...

Nes

While it's one of the oldest streets in Amsterdam, the Nes may not one of the prettiest, but it's filled with plenty of theaters and restaurants...

Nieuwmarkt Organic Farmers' Market

On Nieuwmarkt square, next to the 15th-century former city gate known as De Waag, you'll find a charming farmers’ market on Saturday, where...

Oudemanhuispoort

Landmarked by its now-famous pair of chiseled spectacles set over the Oudezijds Achterburgwal pediment—a sweet reference to old age—this passage...

Stopera

Taking its nickname from the combination of "Stadhuis" (City Hall) and "Opera," this brick-and-marble complex, which opened in 1986, houses...

Trippenhuis

As family home to the two Trip brothers, who made their fortune in the arms trade during the 17th-century Golden Age, this noted house's buckshot...

Waterlooplein

Amsterdam's most famous flea market was once an area bordered by the Leprozengracht (Leper's Canal) and Houtgracht (Wood Canal), which often...

Zuiderkerk

Gorgeous enough to have inspired both Sir Christopher Wren and Claude Monet, this famous church was built between 1603 and 1611 by Hendrick...