History
Initially, the people of Amsterdam called the landscaped nature area between the Amstelveenseweg and the Stadshouderskade “The New Park”. A couple of years after the construction, a statue of the Dutch poet and performer "Vondel" was placed in the park. Since then, the name of the elongated nature reserve changed to Vondelpark.
Design
The park has an English landscape style. Thanks to this style, you think you’re actually in the middle of a forest. When you go for a walk through the Vondelpark, you experience this yourself. Entrance is free and connections between the ponds and river banks complete the experience of ‘real nature within the city’.
The Vondelpark destroyed by the war
In the Second World War, the park was taken by the Germans. They dug gaps so aircraft couldn’t land here and they built German bomb shelters. In November 1944, the park closed its doors because of the constant wood robbery and the overall destruction. The southern part of the park was still in use as a campsite and parking for German Lorries. The camouflaged vehicles hid between the forests, behind the fences. They completely closed off the park with waiting stations, barbed wire, and fences.After the war
In 1947, just after the war, the Vondel Bridge was ready. The bridge connects the “Eerste Constantijn Huygenstraat” with the “Van Baerlestraat”. Since 1953, a tram crosses this bridge. Line 3 doesn’t need to drive around the park anymore since then. The shelters in the park are still there, but they serve for cultural purposes.
Discover the Vondelpark
With more than 10 million visitors a year, the Vondelpark is Amsterdam’s most-visited park. In the summer months, there are theatre acts and concerts in the open air theatre. The multiple catering facilities such as the Vondelparkpaviljoen, the Blue Tea House and the Vondel Garden are perfect places to get a snack. There are also a tennis court, children’s sandboxes and paddling pools for water fund and some playgrounds at the Vondelpark.
The flora and fauna
In de Vondelpark are about 4700 trees, divided over 150 species. Two of these are even on the list of monumental trees in the Netherlands. In the bushes grow many herbs, flowers, and plants. There is no other place in the heart of Amsterdam where so many different plants and animals live. In the park lives a wide variety of all kinds of songbirds and fishes. At the quieter moments, you can also see a hedgehog, squirrel or a rabbit. And that all in the middle of the city!