Rotterdam Sights

  1. De Dubbelde Palmboom

    Just south, De Dubbelde Palmboom is a history museum housing an excellent collection of items relating to Rotterdam's history as a port. Displays are spread throughout the 1826 warehouse and many have a sociological bent.

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  2. Euromast

    At 185m, a shimmy up the Euromast is a must. It offers unparalleled 360-degree views of Rotterdam, with its rotating, glass-walled 'Euroscope' contraption ascending to near the summit. There's a luxury accommodation suite and the Panorama restaurant near the top. Book an abseiling session (around €40 ).

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  3. Historisch Museum Het Schielandhuis

    The city's history is preserved at one of the centre's few surviving 17th-century buildings, at the Historisch Museum Het Schielandhuis. Exhibits focus on everyday life through the ages, such as the (purportedly) oldest surviving wooden shoe. Clogs ahoy!

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  4. Kunsthal

    At the south end of Museumpark, the Kunsthal hosts around 20 temporary exhibitions (including art and design) each year. As the publicity says, everything from 'elitist to popular' gets an airing.

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  5. Maritime Museum Rotterdam

    Maritime Museum Rotterdam is a comprehensive museum that looks at the Netherlands' rich maritime traditions. There's the usual array of models that any youngster would love to take into the tub, plus more interesting and explanatory displays.

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  6. Museum Boijmans van Beuningen

    Among Europe's very finest museums, the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen has a permanent collection spanning all eras of Dutch and European art, including superb old masters. Among the highlights are The Marriage at Cana by Hieronymus Bosch, the Three Maries at the Open Sepulchre by Van Eyck, the minutely detailed Tower of Babel by Pieter Brueghel the Elder, and Portrait of Titus and Man in a Red Cap by Rembrandt.

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  7. Nederlands Architectuur Instituut

    The Nederlands Architectuur Instituut, with one side surrounded by a moat and the other comprising a sweeping flow of brick along Rochussenstraat, offers an amazingly thorough overview of Dutch architecture. Exhibitions are revelatory, and a recent multimedia presentation devoted to utopian genius Hendrik Wijdeveld was mind-expanding. The NAI is a worthy monument in a city that celebrates built space like no other in the land.

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  8. Nederlands Fotomuseum

    The Nederlands Fotomuseum is a fabulous photo museum that's also an archive and information centre for photographers. Its activities were recently bolstered by a bequest from one H Weertheim, who wanted to 'further the interests of photography in the Netherlands'.

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  9. Wereldmuseum

    The Wereldmuseum is dedicated to providing a user-friendly repository of multiculturalism for people of all ages to use to better understand each other. Wonderfully apt that it's in a polyglot port like Rotterdam. The building is dominated by a huge sculpture of a stylised woman by artist Nikki de Saint Phalle. Enter through the statue's legs.

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