Hotel de l'Europe

Hotel de l'Europe

Hotel de l'Europe seen from Rokin
Location within Amsterdam
General information
Location Amsterdam, Netherlands
Coordinates 52°22′3″N 4°53′40″E / 52.36750°N 4.89444°E / 52.36750; 4.89444Coordinates: 52°22′3″N 4°53′40″E / 52.36750°N 4.89444°E / 52.36750; 4.89444
Opening 1896

Hotel de l'Europe is a five-star hotel located on the Amstel river in the centre of Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Hotel de l'Europe is situated opposite and overlooking the Munt, where the river Amstel flows into the Rokin canal. The 19th-century hotel became an official monument (rijksmonument) in 2001. Since 2012 the hotel houses 2 Michelin star with its restaurant Bord'Eau.[1]

Freddy's Bar, the bar of the hotel, is named after Freddy Heineken.

History

A tower at the present-day location of Hotel de l'Europe was demolished in 1633 and five year later the inn, later hotel, Het Rondeel, was built.

Hotel de l'Europe seen from the Amstel

This building was replaced in 1895-1896, when the 50-room Hotel de l'Europe, designed by architect Willem Hamer jr., opened its doors.

Alfred Hitchcock used the hotel just before the Second World War as a location for Foreign Correspondent (1940).

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hotel de l'Europe.

References

Media related to Hotel de l’Europe at Wikimedia Commons

  1. "Michelin Guide 2016". viamichelin.com. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
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