Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Tulip Inn (3 star hotel) does apartments as well as rooms and is located at the top of zeedijk, handy for the centraal station and you're right in the heart of town.

http://www.goldentulip.com/EN/hotels/Netherlands/Amsterdam/TI-amsterdam-centre-hotel-booking-room.aspx

If you can break the bank the Pullitzer is lovely.

http://www.pulitzeramsterdam.com/?PS=EAME_aa_Starwood_NWE-100_Google%20UK_pulitzer%20amsterdam_07/25/11

Avoid the stretch coming out of central station called Damrak. Lots of hotels there but just a somewhat noisy and unattractive part of town, not a "home" kind of place at all.


Anything at/near a canal or river Amstel is generally nice. Zeedijk (Nieuwmarkt-side) is ok too as el Pibe mentioned. As it's a small city you never need to travel too far to get to your hotel so don't worry too much about distance. The "concertgebouw" and "rijksmuseum" area is very nice too, central yet quiet and charming and has plenty of hotels.


An apartment can be nice if you like to rest "at home" in the middle of the day (as hotels obviously do room cleaning and the rooms are generally not very big). Maybe less worth the research for just 2 nights but you can consider it.


Pm me if you have specific questions about the city as I'm from there.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • We do need growth and investment. But cutting spending, is the opposite of investment - degrading transport, increasing waiting lists, etc. The analogy of government spending as a household budget is a very poor one.  Government financial management is probably poor, but every single prospective government says they'll find billions in efficiencies and then fail to find them. I don't believe there is as much waste as people think.  We need to tax unproductive assets, raising money to invest in public services / paying down debt, (or else encouraging people to move their money in to productive investments). 
    • we actually need growth. It may be counter intuitive, but we need investment.   my example is about poor financial management, be it personal or central. I'm referring to poor government financial management.
    • This is to conflate household budgets with government budgets. They are very different things  a large part of the anger felt across the country is the decline in public services after a decade and a half of austerity.  You cut more you get more ugly anger  Of course people need to be persuaded to pay more - but that is only realistic path. You cut more you will find out the hard way 
    • The question marks are far poore
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...