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With its wide boulevards, parks, and elegant 19th-century architecture, the Plantage, only a short walk from Waterlooplein (follow the tram tracks), feels gracious and spacious. The neighborhood's roots stretch back to the 17th century, when the area was divided into 15 parks and it was a recreational zone for the wealthy. Top draws here are the Artis Zoo and its eclectic aquarium, built in 1882 with Neoclassical and Romanesque features. Opposite the zoo is the marvelous Verzetsmuseum (Resistance Museum). There are poignant reminders here of the fact that from the late 19th century up to the World War II, this was a neighborhood for wealthier Jewish families: in little Wertheimpark is the Auschwitz Memorial with its engraved message, "Nooit Meer" (Never Again), and down the road is the Hollandsche Schouwburg, a theater that the German occupiers used to gather Jews before they were sent to their deaths. Between 1941 and 1944, 107,000 Jews were deported from the Netherlands; 5,200 survived, according to the NIOD (Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies). North of the Plantage, around Waterlooplein, is the former Jewish Quarter, with the still-functional Portuguese Synagogue and the four former synagogues that are now the Jewish Historical Museum.

Things to Do

Dining

Box Sociaal

A quirkily named Australian-owned all-day brunch and dinner café can be a surprisingly fun place to stop by for locally roasted specialty coffees...

Café-Restaurant De Plantage

The stunning decor in this expansive space on Artisplein at the ARTIS Amsterdam Royal Zoo is reason enough to visit, but the Mediterranean-influenced...

De Pizzabakkers

Crisp-crusted "Roman artisan pizza " is baked in "Italian-style wood ovens" at this neighborhood favorite, where you'll find everything from...

Eik & Linde

The history of this traditional "brown café" can be traced back to 1832, and thankfully the bar has not lost its prewar charm to prefab fittings...

Oleg Pelmeni Bar

If the weather gods have been dishing out dreary weather and it's comfort food you crave, make a beeline for this Russian-owned pelmeni bar...

Restaurant Elkaar

This small restaurant in a white-and-red corner building near the Tropenmuseum is easy to spot, and inside, the dark-wood paneling, pressed...

Soup en Zo

Soup Etc" bucks Amsterdam's slow-service trend by being particularly speedy as well as health-conscious. At least eight soups are available...

Other

ARTIS Amsterdam Royal Zoo

The name of this zoo, which was the first of its kind in the Netherlands, is short for Natura Artis Magistra (Nature Is the Teacher of the Arts...

CREA Café

Located within the University of Amsterdam's city campus, this hidden gem of a café housed in a former diamond-cutting factory has been converted...

Gassan Diamonds

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

Hermitage Amsterdam

Taking advantage of 300 years of historical links between Amsterdam and St. Petersburg, the directors of the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg...

Hiding in Plain Sight (HPS)

The speakeasy-esque HPS is a properly indie cocktail mecca whose infamous rum-based concoction, "The Walking Dead," has indeed left many locals...

Hortus Botanicus Amsterdam

This wonderful botanical garden was originally laid out as a medicinal herb garden in 1638 by the Amsterdam City Council before the collection...

Joods Historisch Museum

Four Ashkenazi synagogues (or shuls, in Yiddish), dating to the 17th and 18th centuries, were combined with glass-and-steel constructions...

Portuguese Synagogue

Inspired by Jerusalem's Temple of Solomon, Elias Bouman designed this noted synagogue between 1671 and 1675 for the Sephardic community, the...

Tropenmuseum

The country's largest ethnographic museum was first built to educate the Dutch about their colonial history in the East and West Indies, but...

Verzetsmuseum

From May 14, 1940, to May 5, 1945, the Netherlands was occupied by Nazi Germany, and this museum looks at the population's response—who resisted...