AMSTERDAM vs UTRECHT: An American's Experience Living in the Netherlands

In my time as an expat in the Netherlands, I have experienced life in two Dutch cities: Amsterdam and Utrecht. While Amsterdam may be known to many expats, I wanted to share the differences between these two cities based on my experience as an American living in them. Both Amsterdam and Utrecht have a lot to offer!
--
I like to share my experiences of an American expat in the Netherlands. I describe both the unique and everyday aspects of Dutch culture, and life in Holland while enjoying every bit of it!
Blog website: www.dutchamericano.com
Instagram: DutchAmericano
Get in touch: dutchamericanonl@gmail.com
Suggested videos:
American picks up 6 Dutch habits: • American picks up 6 Du...
Holidays in the Netherlands: • Doing it the Dutch way...
Things Americans Might Not Expect When Moving to The Netherlands: • 6 Things Americans Mig...
Things Dutch people are MORE willing to pay for than Americans: • Things Dutch people ar...
9 Dutch Kitchen Stuff Not Used in America: • 9 Dutch Kitchen Stuff ...
5 FAQs about the Dutch: • 5 FAQs about the Dutch...

Пікірлер: 313

  • @NeoOnyx
    @NeoOnyx3 жыл бұрын

    @Dutch Americano It was *literally* a breath of fresh air to see that small bit of you walking and vlogging outside. You should do that more often :-)

  • @nienke7713
    @nienke77133 жыл бұрын

    I feel like Amsterdam is a lot more focussed on tourism and I think that might even be part of the reason for some of the differences you mentioned. As a Dutch person who hasn't lived in either of them, but has visited both of them multiple times I really prefer Utrecht. I also feel Utrecht is a lot more walkable, and I find the city planning more intuitive, and as such I very much prefer Utrecht.

  • @whoknows8225

    @whoknows8225

    3 жыл бұрын

    Amsterdam = crap

  • @JasperJanssen

    @JasperJanssen

    3 жыл бұрын

    As a born and bred Utrechter I obviously prefer here.

  • @CharlesCrous

    @CharlesCrous

    3 жыл бұрын

    Any thoughts on how Delft , Den Haag, Eindhoven and Rotterdam compare to Utrechts city planning? Walkability is important to me too. But also places were I can run, bike and swim. And I've been looking into Almere too.

  • @Man-in-the-green

    @Man-in-the-green

    3 жыл бұрын

    Amsterdam can’t help it’s so beautiful. It’s wasn’t ‘designed’ to attract tons of visitors.

  • @joebloggs2473

    @joebloggs2473

    3 жыл бұрын

    A'dam has really big problems not just planning. It is so unDutch. The tourists just dont realise this. Any other town would give a more Dutch experience but A'dam has the name unfortunately. I live in the town centre of Den Haag and prefer it a 10000 to A'dam which is a dump.

  • @sergimascaro2046
    @sergimascaro20463 жыл бұрын

    I just moved to Utrecht a month ago! Not the best time to do this in the middle of a pandemic, but until now it's been an amazing adventure. I had been several times to Amsterdam and I find it too packed of people, too much. To the point that I didn't enjoy my stay. But then you go to Utrecht and fall in love. Love biking these beautiful streets!

  • @tom_peters
    @tom_peters3 жыл бұрын

    I so much enjoy your vlogs, been here from the start. I am a Dutch native who lived all over the world for many years (incl NYC ;) and always love hearing new perspectives. I find your vlogs incredibly well scripted, well spoken, upbeat, perfectly edited and generally high quality. Now there would be two things I would LOVE to see on your vlog: 1) hear you do a vlog in Dutch :D 2) would love to see you interact with your girlfriend (yes I am nosy, I admit hahahahaha). I have been raised with that it never hurts to ask, what is the worst that can happen. Keep up the great work!!!

  • @richardbloemenkamp8532
    @richardbloemenkamp85323 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for being so nice and positive about the Netherlands. I think sometimes we Dutch tend to focus too much on the issues to see how nice the country actually is.

  • @breathblspandex4467
    @breathblspandex4467 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I recently got accepted into both the University of Amsterdam and Utrecht University and this video helped me consider my options thoroughly.

  • @danielanthony9026
    @danielanthony90263 жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much for making this video. I’m an American expat who’s been living and working in Amsterdam for the last 2 1/2 years, and I’m moving to Utrecht soon for a new job in Rotterdam. We’re really excited to be moving to Utrecht soon, and this video was definitely very informative and very reassuring.

  • @edwardparkhurst9804
    @edwardparkhurst98043 жыл бұрын

    I've been to Utrecht many times, thanks for sharing the memory's with me. Outstanding job young lady. Keep it up and we'll be there for you.

  • @robertthedutchguy4365
    @robertthedutchguy43653 жыл бұрын

    Well done! Thank you. If you would like to visit/see more beautiful cities/towns, I would recommend the Dutch Hanze (Hanseatic) Steden, i.e. Zutphen, Deventer, Zwolle and Kampen.

  • @DutchAmericano

    @DutchAmericano

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the recommendation!

  • @robertthedutchguy4365

    @robertthedutchguy4365

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DutchAmericano You're welcome. It's nice to hear your views on things that I have taken for granted all my life.

  • @ehekkert

    @ehekkert

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DutchAmericano Once Covid-19 is under control and events are allowed again I would recommend visiting Deventer (I am bias) for one of its events. Dickens festival, de Deventer boekenmarkt (the largest outdoor bookmarket of Europe) and Deventer op Stelten would be my suggestions. Though just a simple city walk (with or without a guide) can also be just as enjoyable.

  • @justinoverberg6865

    @justinoverberg6865

    3 жыл бұрын

    Don't forget Harderwijk ;)

  • @ex0stasis72
    @ex0stasis723 жыл бұрын

    That's it. I decided I want to permanently move to Utrecht. I'm narrowing down on my plans to escape North America. I started with wanting to move to Sweden, then Germany, then the Netherlands, then Amsterdam, Utrecht, or Groningen, and now to just Utrecht.

  • @johnnybravo6225

    @johnnybravo6225

    Жыл бұрын

    Have you moved there yet ?

  • @ex0stasis72

    @ex0stasis72

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnnybravo6225 no, it's more of a long term goal. First I need to get some work experience in the US before any Dutch employers will want to sponsor me. Either that or I need to build up an online income that I can take with me to the Netherlands to live off of.

  • @martynfromnl
    @martynfromnl3 жыл бұрын

    Utrecht doesn't have trams? I agree Utrecht doesn't have a metro, but I am pretty sure there is a regional tram service in the province of Utrecht including the city of Utrecht. Maybe it does not covers parts of the city where you want or have to go regularly?

  • @Damian-zh8it

    @Damian-zh8it

    3 жыл бұрын

    Utrecht even got one of the most expensive tramline in the whole world haha

  • @Sense008

    @Sense008

    3 жыл бұрын

    True there are trams, but not real city trams, more like trams going to places like Nieuwegein and IJsselstein purely for commute from periphery towns to the city proper, whereas in Amstedam the trams are for transportation within the city

  • @Rob2

    @Rob2

    3 жыл бұрын

    The trams in Utrecht are "sneltrams" and they are what other countries would call "light rail", a sort of lighter railroad system with more stops. In fact, even the normal (NS) railroad system would qualify as "light rail" in many other countries, certainly the "stoptrein".

  • @lucano2582

    @lucano2582

    3 жыл бұрын

    We just got new tramlines to the uithof and to ijsselstein etc Theyre not through the city centre but utrecht does have tram lines

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    3 жыл бұрын

    i was in a tram there, they are trams, only they do have separate tracks, safety reasons.

  • @jonasjaagur9635
    @jonasjaagur96353 жыл бұрын

    Hey Eva, I have to say I'm really enjoying your videos.

  • @a_diamond
    @a_diamond3 жыл бұрын

    Eva, thank you for these videos. ❤️

  • @jannetteberends8730
    @jannetteberends87303 жыл бұрын

    Amsterdam also have a lot more tourists. It’s even becoming a problem as I understand. Personally I think Amsterdam is depressing. I prefer Utrecht, it has a more friendly atmosphere. And about staying expats. Students do the same. Years ago it was a real problem, only in Utrecht. There a lot of unemployed academics.

  • @chrislaarman7532

    @chrislaarman7532

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Jannette Berends: Yes, the tourists have been a problem to Amsterdam for years now, by their numbers in certain places and by the behavior of some groups. We'll see how several developments work out.... I don't think that Amsterdam (or whatever city in the Netherlands) is depressing, but the atmosphere varies within cities with place and time. I wonder if the presence of students could explain positive developments, and then the "democratization" of studying at universities (keyword: 1968). Now anyone could study anything, leaving "corpsballen" a minority, and female students something common. Downtown Utrecht definitely has a positive vibe (not counting Hoog Catharijne), but in my memory for a few decades. I vaguely remember the quarter between the old railway station and the original Catharijnesingel - it's among my most depressing memories of a city, but then: it was about to make way. Wait! Traffic must have played an important role in the atmosphere of many Dutch cities (and likely abroad). Cars, cars, cars, parked and queueing - until through traffic got its ring roads and cars were discouraged from being downtown. (Tip: try the KZread channel of Not Just Bikes, but there are more.) This may well be a major difference between North-America and Northwest-Europe: the level of involvement of municipalities (or equivalent) in urban planning and renewal. The reconstruction of Hoog Catharijne and the Catharijnesingel was quite an effort. Some lessons seem learned.

  • @jannetteberends8730

    @jannetteberends8730

    3 жыл бұрын

    Chris Laarman I remember the situation before Hoog Catharijne. It was the time of the speed addiction. All those speed freaks lived there. It was a scary place. i think students played a huge role in city development. I know the channel not just bikes. And bicycleDutch is also interesting, lot of videos about infrastructure and transformations of car roads to bicycle paths. People from other countries often comment on both channels that they would never succeed getting that infrastructure realized in their city. As if this just happened because our government was so bike friendly. Once in a while I can’t help reacting with our history to come to this result. Starting with Provo. Kabouters, ENWB and stop de kindermoord. Only the last one didn’t originate in universities.

  • @prodbyhart2107
    @prodbyhart21072 жыл бұрын

    Did anyone notice your bong ? LOL, also thanks for the video it's super informative

  • @edwinvenema1017
    @edwinvenema10173 жыл бұрын

    Great observations. Again!

  • @donaldumoren3665
    @donaldumoren3665 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Eva, if I got it right....this is a really nice video, thank you so much. I wish to connect with you when I arrive at Utrecht, I'm coming in for my MBA in Utrecht including work stuff as an expat. And that accomodation insight is absolutely helpful. I look forward to seeing you in Netherlands.

  • @bertabcdefg3704
    @bertabcdefg37043 жыл бұрын

    Hi Ava Ik kijk regelmatig naar je video's. Gewoon leuk om naar te kijken (lees dit als een compliment). Ik neem je serieus vandaar mijn reactie in het Nederlands. Wat mij opvalt is dat dit de eerste video is waaruit je kan afleiden dat Nederland groter is dan Amsterdam en Utrecht. Naarmate je verder van de Randstad vandaan bent, nemen de verschillen toe. Voorbeelden zijn de prijzen van huizen, de mentaliteit of de harde/zachte G, etc., etc. Ik zou het leuk vinden als je een keer aandacht zou hebben voor andere delen van Nederland. Ik ben namelijk benieuwd hoe jij als Amerikaan kijkt naar Nederland als geheel.

  • @harrywissink842
    @harrywissink8423 жыл бұрын

    Nice video again Communication talent .. hope you explore themes ! Wish you lots of succes

  • @readygi
    @readygi3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this video:) im planning to move to Utrecht in couple months and im beyond excited:) btw. you're gorgeous

  • @ProsciuttinoXL
    @ProsciuttinoXL3 жыл бұрын

    Ik ben enorm chauvinistisch over Utrecht, maar je hebt toch een paar dingen gevonden die in Amsterdam beter zijn: de trams en metro (ik heb een hekel aan bussen). En de schaal heeft ook voordelen: inderdaad, meer musea, culturele voorzieningen, te voet uren dwalen binnen de grachten en... Artis. Artis schiet me nu te binnen, maar mijn kinderen zijn opgegroeid in Amsterdam en dan is een jaarkaart een geweldig idee.

  • @ProsciuttinoXL

    @ProsciuttinoXL

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Ad Lockhorst Als er ooit een vergelijking komt tussen Rotterdam en Amsterdam, zal ik nog eens denken aan je opmerking. Maar in de vergelijking tussen Utrecht en Amsterdam is Artis echt een pluspunt voor Amsterdam.

  • @arneclements6911
    @arneclements69113 жыл бұрын

    Yay, I am so happy top see Lowieke de Vos is back :P

  • @robertdejager1788
    @robertdejager17883 жыл бұрын

    Jippieieieie the mouse is back, and i like the mouse it's "gezellig" . Thank you Eva.

  • @Flossie710
    @Flossie7103 жыл бұрын

    Amsterdam is the prettiest . I always felt so free there. The smell of the fresh water from the canals on a summer afternoon... sunlight dappling the leaves of the trees, the colours of a pride flag weaving up and down. All kinds of people and languages around and everybody just chilling. Found myself singing out loud while riding my bike, queen of the universe. Completely free and seeing beauty everywhere. Amsterdam is the perfect size compared to other capitals in Europe. Most of all, it's a city that is lived in by its people, it serves its people well. . Many capitals have the old part of the city where pedestrians rule. Not many have that same human friendly set up outside of the old center. I love the quirky statues , or Atari (Sega?) monsters on tiles , that are laid into the walls of the buildings (instead of a street name sign) along the Amstel. I love how you have houseboats with Buddha statues in front of the Headquarters of Phillips, I love the Mandarin streetname signs in the oldest harbour quarter (Chinese quarter) I love how those are probably more intelligible to foreigners than the Dutch name of those streets (Oudezijdse Achterburgwal). Amsterdam is unique in the universe. It has a bad arse, triple x, city coat of arms and an epic Motto/ Creed: " Heroic, Determined, Merciful ".

  • @frankhooper7871

    @frankhooper7871

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'll agree about the fresh water smell _now_ but will say that the first time I visited A'dam [quite a few years ago now] the canals' smell was anything but fresh LOL.

  • @Flossie710

    @Flossie710

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@frankhooper7871 lol, I knew someone would say something about that. Personally, in 10 years living there, I've only ever noticed the smell of the canals when it was especially sweet. You know what I mean? In hot weather. It's hard to put into words .

  • @Man-in-the-green

    @Man-in-the-green

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@frankhooper7871 De grachten van Amsterdam worden elke dag twee maal ververst. De grachten zijn nog nooit zo schoon geweest.

  • @LUCE2019
    @LUCE20193 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this beautiful video 👍 I hope to visit this place one day and admire its beauty with my own eyes 😊 See you next video

  • @hansc8433
    @hansc84333 жыл бұрын

    Loved the bit where you vlogged outside. It’s so much more dynamic and even more pleasant to watch :) I used to work in Utrecht (for the last 5 years), but I’ve never had the urge or desire to actually walk through the city. I think that vibe you mentioned is the one thing that puts me off. It’s such a small city, it’s ALWAYS under construction, the centre is way too crowded and cramped, it’s virtually impossible to navigate by motorcycle (I’m afraid I don’t really like public transport), the streets are even narrower than in Amsterdam and that horrible train station/shopping centre/chaos/food court... It just feels so designed and sculptured. Nope, not my kind of city. So, I’m happy my assignment in Utrecht ended and I can just stay in the Amsterdam area: wider streets, a more anonymous vibe, and I’m not really sure how to explain it, but I always feel you can just be part of the city without having to come too close and become all mushy and emotional about living there and calling it “your city”.

  • @dojadog4223

    @dojadog4223

    3 жыл бұрын

    I mostly agree. But what many expats fail to see is that Dutch cities are a bit more than just that tiny 1000-years old center.

  • @BlueStarDragon
    @BlueStarDragon3 жыл бұрын

    There is one tramline in Utrecht. Currently partly shut down because of repairs. Starting the 4th of July it will be totally shut down. It starts at Utrecht Central Station Jaarbeursplein. And has 2 end destinations. Ijsselstein (line 61) en Nieuwegein-zuid (line 60)

  • @themadsamplist
    @themadsamplist3 жыл бұрын

    The Utrecht botanical garden is one of the most beautiful I have visited I really recommend it

  • @etierik
    @etierik3 жыл бұрын

    Hi, I lived in Utrecht from 1990 through 2012... I'm a bit surprised to hear you say people don't use buses in Utrecht. Until the new tram line was finished, we probably had the busiest bus line in the country. Extremely long buses that ran every two minutes and still couldn't handle all the students going to the university area. But we don't use buses to get around in the center, we use them to get to the residential areas and the university area that are outside the center.

  • @ffqm

    @ffqm

    2 жыл бұрын

    They are now substituted by a tram line (so yes, we actually do have trams). Also the buses are used a lot on other lines. There's actually also more business in Utrecht than in Amsterdam (Utrecht was the most successful economic region in the EU for a while). So it's a nice vlog but not everything is correct.

  • @itomg
    @itomg3 жыл бұрын

    Being born and raised in Amsterdam, I think I feel like a lot of 'Amsterdammers': We are loosing Amsterdam to foreigners. Now don't get me wrong, diversity in the city is a good thing. But Amsterdam has become so tourist and expat orientated that it has already lost some of its original charm. Even to us it feels less Dutch or Amsterdams if you will. So yeah, I can relate to you comment. And on top of that it says something about your willingness to be part of us.

  • @marceldouwstra5847

    @marceldouwstra5847

    3 жыл бұрын

    Born in Amsterdam but live in Utrecht. Worked for quite some years in Amsterdam and I agree. Amsterdam, and especially the city center, feels like a huge tourist attraction. The streets are swarming with tourists. And that also reflects in the kind of shops in the center, the amount of hotels, etc. I believe Utrecht only has 2 souvenir shops in the entire city center.

  • @JipBosch

    @JipBosch

    3 жыл бұрын

    I tear up when I walk on the Zeedijk nowadays... I miss the yellow trams. I miss the Amsterdam from back in the days. I feel like the city is hijacked by Expats and Tourists. I went to school there and lived 50m from Leidseplein. I live in Utrecht now and my girlfriend in Amsterdam, but still... I miss Amsterdam how it used to be.

  • @fadimohammedal-atawi8482

    @fadimohammedal-atawi8482

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well, the greatest thing about the netherlands in general is that everybody speaks English . International expats have no trouble communicating and living in the netherlands. Most siginficantly, this aims for the country's prosperity and over all well-being

  • @PvdBMr
    @PvdBMr3 жыл бұрын

    We must be living close to each other. I'll say hi when I see you around the Singel or the Oude / Nieuwe Gracht. Good that you are happy here in Urecht!

  • @wilcovanwinden6581
    @wilcovanwinden65813 жыл бұрын

    As a born and raised Utrechter, i enjoy seeing you praising the city. It doesn't surrender anything in beauty to amsterdam but it's not as touristy, more compact and easier to get outside of. It's also great to see you venturing outside. You're ofcourse no longer a tourist, but what i'm used to from those is that they'll visit amsterdam, keukenhof and some windmills, and that's it. The country has so much more to offer beyond that tourist trap of a capital. We have castles, scenic countryside and forests, lakes, an impressive harbour and lots of civil engineering stuff. If you have an interest in civil engineering works, might i suggest the Maeslantkering at Hoek van Holland or the Oosterscheldekering in Zeeland? The latter one is often regarded as the centerpiece of the Deltawerken and took an enormous amount of time and effort to complete, while the former is one of the biggest movable structures in the world.

  • @AkborVideo
    @AkborVideo3 жыл бұрын

    Hi Eva, I love your videos and how you talk about Dutch things. It makes me realize how happy I am to live here. I am not born here, and often I find myself thinking that other cultures are nicer for several reasons (social behaviour, food, music). Your videos take me back to reality that 'Holland' is pretty great. I am a little disappointed though, that you never speak about Rotterdam (my city, obviously). I really invite you to come here! It has great architecture, food, Cinneville cinemas en restaurants (although not everything is always available due to the forever changing Corona policy). Anyway, keep up the good work! I just recently discovered your channel and I am planning to watch all your posts "met terugwerkende kracht". Also, I expect a post about pindakaas, Klikbeet and kapsalon soon. :)

  • @ouabboumohamed7690
    @ouabboumohamed76903 жыл бұрын

    I'm also living in Utrecht for a year. Nice video

  • @co7013
    @co70133 жыл бұрын

    For me the biggest difference is that the old part of Utrecht is much smaller and heavily overcrowded (pre-Corona). Amsterdam off course is (or was/will be) as overcrowded as Utrecht, but because the old town is much bigger, you can find corners that are quieter. In Utrecht, the canals just go from north to south. The south end is more quiet. But you either go to the busy part or a bit more south. It's almost linear, whereas in Amsterdam you can move into different directions and sort of avoid the busy parts.

  • @etierik
    @etierik3 жыл бұрын

    When I moved from Utrecht to Soesterberg, I realized that reaching the outdoors from the center and Utrecht is not really that quick... Oh, and I moved there because I couldn't afford a house in Utrecht. The city is still relatively expensive compared to most other place (but not compared to Amsterdam, of course).

  • @davidvandenbroeck5068
    @davidvandenbroeck5068 Жыл бұрын

    Visiting Utrecht right now and really think it is a great city. I am planning on moving to the Netherlands in a couple of years and so far, Utrecht is my number one choice of the handful of places I’ve visited.

  • @VaneezyTV
    @VaneezyTV3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this video!!!! I want to eventually move to Utrecht. I want to move to Amsterdam, but I do like a more quiet place so I feel like Utrecht is a bit of both worlds. I plan on moving there in 6 months (once the covid mess is a bit more chill) I plan on moving there & using DAFT though... but I wonder how that is now after covid. Could you plz make a video on that!? 💜💜💜💜🥰 love you!! I've been watching you since your first video ever, & seeing your growth not just in numbers but also in yourself is so amazing 🌞🌻 keep it up!

  • @VaneezyTV

    @VaneezyTV

    3 жыл бұрын

    Also maybe make a video on cost of living at Utrecht & just the whole process of becoming an expat as an American. Thank you!

  • @vincenzodigrande2070
    @vincenzodigrande20703 жыл бұрын

    So many cities are great in the Netherlands, like Groningen, Middelburg, Maastricht, Eindhoven and many more, but I do agree, Utrecht is really nicely centered in the country. I live in Hilversum myself. It is not a city, but basically a village, but it is larger than some cities, and has three train stations. It also has a bit of a city vibe. I like it here, and there are a lot of really cute small villages around it, with lots of woodland, and pancake restaurants, and there is a fresh market twice a week.

  • @oudekaas5625
    @oudekaas56253 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Very entertaining. It is goed to live in the Netherlands.

  • @eefaaf
    @eefaaf3 жыл бұрын

    Well, I may not know Utrecht outside of the city centre well enough to judge, but the thing about Amsterdam is, it is a lot more than its centre, there are many (often less touristic) 'villages' enclosed in the city, with their own atmosphere and character. Parts you would usually just pass by unnoticed when you go to your usual destinations, be it work or study. One of the great aspects of studying at the University of Amsterdam back when I did was that it has institutes throughout the city, sometimes in historical buildings, sometimes on the outskirts. I gather many of those have closed since, and have been more centralized. When I studied Medicine, there were two academic hospitals, the Binnengasthuis and the Wilhelmina Gasthuis, while lectures were given in the mathematics building (across from Kriterion... that's how it often was described. I always found that funny as the Kriterion cinema is a smallish old building, while the modern university building, and the huge chemistry lab behind it is much larger), and practical instructions amongst others in the Diamantslijperij (refering to its former use), or the Jan Swammerdam Instituut. These days it all moved to the AMC, far from the centre. *sigh* Showing my age, for sure :)

  • @Budha75
    @Budha753 жыл бұрын

    If you like visiting museums, I can really recommend the National Military Museum in Soesterberg. It's a nice bike ride from Utrecht :-)

  • @djopdam199
    @djopdam1993 жыл бұрын

    That's why I love Leiden its a small Utrecht but with more canals

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    3 жыл бұрын

    canals, i only know 3, singel, new and old canal...

  • @DutchLabrat

    @DutchLabrat

    3 жыл бұрын

    I am not sure it is fair to compare other cities to the perfection that Leiden is :D

  • @WhoIsRamsey
    @WhoIsRamsey3 жыл бұрын

    Your videos are always so much fun to watch. I always enjoy them a lot. I wonder how you rate Den Haag compared to Amsterdam en Utrecht?

  • @willemp62
    @willemp623 жыл бұрын

    Very nice cabinet haha.. Nice video also ofcourse

  • @DutchAmericano

    @DutchAmericano

    3 жыл бұрын

    Haha, thank you!

  • @jpdj2715
    @jpdj27153 жыл бұрын

    At 5.7K subscribers this Dutch guy had underestimated your channel and felt it was underrated. Turned that into action.

  • @Sense008
    @Sense0083 жыл бұрын

    I like this.... I currently live in the middle of nowhere in Drenthe(which is also very beautiful), but I have lived in Utrecht for over 12 years, and it still feels like 'my' city. Amsterdam has more cultural events, but summer in Utrecht when there is no COVID-19 is planned full to the brim with different cultural festivals and lots to do. I am biased but I personally prefer Utrecht over Amaterdam, because it has much more small town feel than amsterdam, and also fewer tourists. The amount of tourists in Amsterdam is totally understandable but also kinda overwhelming (and depressing to me)

  • @KelluxAZ
    @KelluxAZ2 жыл бұрын

    We really enjoy your informative videos. We are currently looking to buy a house in Utrecht. We are avid cyclists and adventurers, where would you recommend living/neighborhoods in the Utrecht area?

  • @piderman871
    @piderman8713 жыл бұрын

    I'm Dutch and people will speak English to me in horeca in Amsterdam, don't worry about it haha. A'dam is sooo touristy. Probably the reason temporary expats live there is because if you are not here to stay it's easier to live in a more international community like A'dam.

  • @marcobreur.
    @marcobreur.3 жыл бұрын

    I have always wondered why you still pronounce Amsterdam in an American way " Emsterdem" , but pronounce Utrecht in a Dutch way.

  • @DutchAmericano

    @DutchAmericano

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh, interesting! I think to me when I say "Amsterdam" the Dutch way, I feel like I'm pretending to be "fancy".

  • @MusicJunky3

    @MusicJunky3

    3 жыл бұрын

    I don't know how you do it or what,but these episodes are so charming 😍! And the fox returns!

  • @MrJlin1982

    @MrJlin1982

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DutchAmericano nee hoor,Eva over het buitenleven gesproken, verlaat dan vooral de Randstad en ga naar echte natuur,zoals in Gelderland,Overijssel,Groningen,Zeeland of Limburg

  • @BobWitlox

    @BobWitlox

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DutchAmericano Not to me. It would show how ingeburgerd you are. Emsterdem sounds very American.

  • @jeroenvanrooijen1086

    @jeroenvanrooijen1086

    3 жыл бұрын

    More people in Amsterdam say Emsterdem than people in Utrecht say Joetrech.

  • @McStrien
    @McStrien3 жыл бұрын

    City center of Amsterdam is now so much geared towards tourists, that even I am addressed to in English.

  • @bastiann93

    @bastiann93

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ja dat kan best behoorlijk irritant zijn

  • @Paul_C
    @Paul_C3 жыл бұрын

    Museums you might want to visit if quirky is a thing: Museum Speelklok, Musiom, Museum voor het Kruideniersbedrijf and a few others.

  • @jjbankert

    @jjbankert

    3 жыл бұрын

    I loved Speelklok when I was young. Also the Train Museum is awesome.

  • @amosamwig8394

    @amosamwig8394

    3 жыл бұрын

    museums are for boomers, who needs museums when you have *MEMES*

  • @nitwit999

    @nitwit999

    3 жыл бұрын

    Also try to visit Sint Eloyen Gasthuis at Mariaplaats. Only open 1 day a year, but it is special!

  • @JayLemke

    @JayLemke

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Speelklok museum was really wonderful and surprising, Much better than I'd expected, especially all the musical automata. Worth a trip.

  • @nat2083
    @nat20832 жыл бұрын

    Hi Ava, thank you for this video, it was extremely helpful for us. My family and I are planning on moving to the Netherlands and we were debating between Utrecht, Amsterdam and the Hague. I think this video is a win for Utrecht. By the way, can you recommend realtors in Utrecht? Who did you use? Was the process ok? I hear it's hard to rent. Let me know and again thanks!

  • @achaachimyriam6382

    @achaachimyriam6382

    11 ай бұрын

    Hello! Reading your comment makes me think of me as I'm the same situation as we seriously considering moving to Utrecht in 2025. Did you finally find what you were looking for? The rental/real estate topic is the biggest challenge... Any tips to share would be more than welcome :=) thanks from France!

  • @MaxBarnish
    @MaxBarnish Жыл бұрын

    I am just back from a business trip to Utrecht. I really enjoyed it. Although it will be better once works on cathedral tower are finished. But I found the streets confusing - it was literally impossible to get to the Park Plaza Hotel! I ended up on a road but then the pavement ran out and it felt that it was going around hotel but no access - ended up having to go back to the other side of city centre to try a different route, was quite scary!

  • @legomattie3295
    @legomattie32953 жыл бұрын

    I think you are spot on. However there are about as many musea in utrecht as in amsterdam. Smaller ofcourse, but some are really worth visiting: spoorwegmuseum (railroad museum) and museum speelklok (a museum about history of organs, pianola's, musicboxes). Ok the latter sounds boring, but trust me, it is a must see.

  • @Man-in-the-green

    @Man-in-the-green

    3 жыл бұрын

    87 Musea in Amsterdam en 17 musea in Utrecht. And you call that as many... oké dan.

  • @rotflol6666
    @rotflol66663 жыл бұрын

    You are correct in Amsterdam being the cultural hub/center, most of the underrated stuff mentioned about Utrecht is because it is geographically centered in the Netherlands and you experienced Amsterdam from the center (pun intended), I also think Amsterdam is a more social/open city to expats, we dutch pride ourselves on speaking English, won't that as easy in Germany or France :-) Glad you love Utrecht so much, keep up in informing all the non-natives about the Netherlands being more than "just" Amsterdam. Have fun and tot de volgende keer (op KZread)

  • @peterhendriks1602
    @peterhendriks16023 жыл бұрын

    You could say that Dutch 16t/17th century cities are basically the same, but they come in different sizes. Leiden is the small version, Utrecht is the medium size and Amsterdam is large. But in a way they are all alike.

  • @PetervanderKruys
    @PetervanderKruys3 жыл бұрын

    I’m Dutch and I only had it in Amsterdam where in a shop they spoke English to me, never had that in any other city

  • @EmmaVZ

    @EmmaVZ

    3 жыл бұрын

    I've had that happen to me in Rotterdam as well

  • @chrislaarman7532
    @chrislaarman75323 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the observations, Eva! I think you're right. However: Vibe: I think that the "vibes" of Amsterdam and Utrecht are converging. My mother grew up in Utrecht, but kept disliking the "stijfheid" (formality?) of Utrecht all her life. Whereas she enjoyed the tolerance of Amsterdam (where I have always lived). Some difference like we Dutch used to feel with Germans. During the last three our four decades I have felt both differences vanish (from the general level to the individual level). Amsterdam has always been a place of international trade, with commerce being more important than religion (keyword: 1578). Utrecht had been more of a frontier town, going back to the Roman Empire. Its decay was stopped by the arrival of the railways (starting in 1843), and in 1852(?) it became the capital of the restored Roman-Catholic church province of the Netherlands - situated in the Protestant Bible Belt. Countryside: I don't agree with the idea of the time needed to leave Amsterdam by bicycle. The famous "Algemeen UitbreidingsPlan" (1935?) reserved "fingers of green" (often along waterways) in the rapid expansion of Amsterdam from that date. I admit that they are under pressure. Still, if you start at Amstelstation and ride to Ouderkerk along the Amstel, you are to see the farms in well under that half hour. And me, I live within a ten minutes' walk to the ferry to Central station, yet I'll cross the A10 (motorway ring) within an hour by foot - but the "finger" of the Noordhollands Kanaal even reaches to just opposite the Central station. Alright, you may have to count Vondelpark as a "finger" to accept my story.

  • @danicrf
    @danicrf3 жыл бұрын

    Also noticed that dutch people in Amsterdam tend to talk to you in english, even if you start the conversation in dutch. I’m sure they try to be more welcoming to foreigners by doing this. I remember asking a guy on the street about a tram line in dutch. We actually had a full conversation where I was talking to him in dutch and he was responding in english 😂 from this day on, I started to tell people that I don’t speak any english, so i could practice my dutch 😌

  • @spiderweb14
    @spiderweb142 жыл бұрын

    Hi, what's the website name to look for a place in Utrecht or Netherlands?

  • @VaneezyTV
    @VaneezyTV3 жыл бұрын

    I have so many questions lol but to start off, does Utrecht have markets like Amsterdam with fresh produce etc.?

  • @prikkeprakker

    @prikkeprakker

    3 жыл бұрын

    Almost all Dutch City's will have markets with fresh produce.

  • @JayLemke
    @JayLemke3 жыл бұрын

    Another great feature of Utrecht is the university, partly in the center, but mostly a short bus ride outside. And so all the students, who seem more noticeable in Utrecht. In Amsterdam the students just disappear into the crowds of people. Also not all the tourists in Amsterdam are nice, polite people (you know who I mean).

  • @mcorrelje
    @mcorrelje3 жыл бұрын

    I don't think you ever mentioned Delft in one of your videos? I am a fan though! But I always hear Utrecht, Amsterdam and Leiden but I would suggest a visit to Delft as I used to study there and I think you would like it very much. Also when interested in Dutch and the Royal family history, Delft is quite an important city lol.

  • @janf5021
    @janf50213 жыл бұрын

    I know a-dam ver well and especially the central districts are extremly touristic. At the outer skirts you find the more normal as in every city. As i havent been to Utrecht yet (always transpassing) i like this comparison video. Its a reason to stop by. Maybe some day one of those become my home in future as i loooooove the dutch

  • @MrJlin1982
    @MrJlin19823 жыл бұрын

    Rhenen op de Zuid-Veluwe is nog geen uur bij je vandaan en de nabijgelegen Veluwezoom is 110M NAP

  • @melcocha1536
    @melcocha1536 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Ava! We are looking for good family neighbours in Utrecht, any chance that you could do a video regarding that?

  • @ericschout8058
    @ericschout80583 жыл бұрын

    ideas for future vlogs: difference in driving (like the (wrong) place the trafficlights are in the US, all the roundabouts etc cars US vs the Netherlands (brands, size, prices etc) history (show us the castles ouside Utrecht and the old churches nice place to show is Dordrecht, (the oldest town of Holland) or Naarden (defence town in the 1500's)

  • @justinjacobs1520
    @justinjacobs15203 жыл бұрын

    Books. What are their bookstores like? What authors might we know from there?

  • @walterkeybell
    @walterkeybell3 жыл бұрын

    Every city or town in the Netherlands has a different "vibe". Depends on what you're looking for. Rotterdam and Den Haag consider them as big cities, like Utrecht do and to Dutch standards they are. But these cities "feel" smaller than Amsterdam. Even though there's a rather big international community in those cities they still feel as a Dutch city. Go outside de Randstad away from the big cities to any town or city and you'll find a different Netherlands. I imagine this is the same in the US or any other country for that matter. Keep up the good work, love your videos..

  • @Man-in-the-green

    @Man-in-the-green

    3 жыл бұрын

    Perfect uitgelegd Ewout. Dank. Het is vaak appels en peren vergelijken.

  • @scb2scb2
    @scb2scb2 Жыл бұрын

    Living in Utrecht and working in Amsterdam for me the biggest thing you almost skipped over is the difference in bike infrastructure utrecht is way better and the gap is growing fast... bicycling in amsterdam is not bad but cities like Utrecht are taking it to a whole new level. And yes getting to nature is one of the elements.

  • @Ipuffyy
    @Ipuffyy3 жыл бұрын

    even I get the English treatment as well, despite being Dutch. That's usually only in Centrum. Outside of centrum near De Pijp area it's very Dutch.

  • @jeroenhendriks40
    @jeroenhendriks403 жыл бұрын

    When do you come to nijmegen

  • @dannymolfilmpie
    @dannymolfilmpie3 жыл бұрын

    But Utrecht has Tivoli.Which seems to be build for the future, just one level up from paradiso/melkweg in amsterdam which are wrold-renowned podia in itself

  • @wisecat.
    @wisecat.3 жыл бұрын

    I'm dutch and I also live in Utrecht (historic centre). Even though Amsterdam is a 20-30 minute train ride, I never go to Amsterdam. It has been literally years maybe a decade ago since i've been in Amsterdam. And then it was only for a short afternoon. Being there, it drives me crazy. I don't like that big city vibe at all. Utrecht is a lot smaller. people are more friendly and the vibe for me is just spot on. Especially the centre where I live. It's like a village within a city

  • @dojadog4223

    @dojadog4223

    3 жыл бұрын

    I come in both cities a lot and it's true what you say to a degree but I also feel many people exaggerate these differences in their heads. They've already decided Amsterdam is terrible so that's what you experience. In the end, if you walk in the Jordaan it feel just as much like 'a village', in fact, every Dutch city center has that vibe. Amsterdam just has many tourists (but many are gone now:)). Also Rotterdam is a notable exception of course.

  • @Man-in-the-green

    @Man-in-the-green

    3 жыл бұрын

    So in that short afternoon in Amsterdam a decade or so you noticed the people where not that friendly... oké dan... apart.

  • @co7013
    @co70133 жыл бұрын

    The urban design of Amsterdam makes it very easy to be 'out' on the bicycle in 5 minutes in almost every direction.

  • @TheSynecdoche

    @TheSynecdoche

    3 жыл бұрын

    Only if you are capable of warp speed. I have relatives in Amsterdam, in opposite directions from the central station, and it takes me 30 minutes in either direction by tram to get there, still well within the confines of the city, and that is without counting the waiting time.

  • @co7013

    @co7013

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@TheSynecdoche Well, that's a very different thing. Amsterdam has 'finger'-like extensions. In between are green area's that reach into the city and are quite close to the center. So they are close by if you're on a bicycle. The flip side to that is that these 'fingers' are quite long. So moving out along one of them from the centre by public transport takes some time.

  • @mikehydropneumatic2583
    @mikehydropneumatic25833 жыл бұрын

    People don't panic! You can buy flessenlikkers everywhere! But Utrecht has the worlds biggest record fair!

  • @PH61a

    @PH61a

    3 жыл бұрын

    ...and the world’s biggest bike garage!

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    3 жыл бұрын

    why you use that? Did you discover your local yogurt aisle, found any vla! Dutch stores have huge Yogurt sections, not needed for yogurt! Vla? why you need that?

  • @TheEvertw
    @TheEvertw3 жыл бұрын

    Utrecht is definitely more Dutch than Amsterdam. Amsterdam feels like a foreign city to most Dutchies. One might say Amsterdam is more a "cosmopolitan" city, not a Dutch one.

  • @Pannemat

    @Pannemat

    3 жыл бұрын

    Speak for yourself, please.

  • @33lex55

    @33lex55

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think you hit the nail on the head, there.

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    3 жыл бұрын

    Tommy hill figure, Nike, Matel, many companies call Amsterdam CEO headquarters. cosmopolitan, that sounds too 1950 to me, now we just say international i guess.

  • @thephilosopherofculture4559
    @thephilosopherofculture45593 жыл бұрын

    You are totally right. I live in Amsterdam and the first thing I ask if I accost someone, is "Do you speak Dutch?"(Spreekt u Nederlands?) You don't do that anywhere else in The Netherlands.

  • @ay7115
    @ay71153 жыл бұрын

    You are NOT correct Utrecht has the Tram. I like Utrecht better, people are nicer and it has a friendly atmosphere.There are lots of fun cafe's and restaurants. I love biking everywhere in Utrecht, the flower market, the weekend market. etc, etc The city is centrally located for travel.

  • @RealConstructor
    @RealConstructor3 жыл бұрын

    I live between both cities and I would rather live in Utrecht and visit Amsterdam than the other way around.

  • @mikedehollander6848
    @mikedehollander68483 жыл бұрын

    utrecht has a tram to and from ijsselstein en nieuwegein en sinds kort naar de uithof

  • @woutervanr
    @woutervanr3 жыл бұрын

    Top musea in Utrecht zijn toch eerder het Spoorwegmuseum, Speelklok en Catherijneconvent?! En koop een museumjaarkaart...Betaal je 60 euro en kan je zo vaak je wilt een museum in. Dat heb je in 4 musea in Amsterdam er al uit.

  • @detached2
    @detached23 жыл бұрын

    I wonder which other beautifull cities you know beside Amsterdam and Utrecht. Like: The Hague, Alkmaar, Enkhuizen, Hoorn. Or smaller places like Bergen (NH), Hindeloopen, Delft, Zierikzee, Veere, Kampen, Edam etc.

  • @regntonne
    @regntonne3 жыл бұрын

    And Tivoli.

  • @Robin-fp6sx
    @Robin-fp6sx3 жыл бұрын

    Ah! Good to see the sad dead fox is back :)

  • @ronnie9187
    @ronnie918711 ай бұрын

    I find the vibe (as a person grown up in Utrecht) different. Amsterdam can be electrifying, more concentration of international talents in art and science. Even internationally it can compete with much larger cities like Paris or London when it comes to the quality of high culture. The Concertgebouw, the Stopera, Ballet, the theathres, the large Museums, the 200 art galeries, the artistic underground. They are all, when googled mentioned in many top 10 lists. Something that every Dutchman is I think proud. Even in most big cities in the USA you don't have such a massive concentration of quality of high culture. Utrecht is a bit overshine by this very bright star. It is much smaller, a province city, but with a very unique and special charm and character First of all, it is much older then Amsterdam and you feel that if you walk for example on a sunday morning on the Nieuwe Gracht along Pausdam, and you here the church Carillion of the majestic Dom Tower play. You feel the very old history of the city, you feel the centuries, all the epoches of European history that it has been a part of. It is magic. I just don't have that so strong in Amsterdam. The 17th century is so dominating in its history that other (also interesting parts) are overshine by it. Both cities are interesting but in many ways not really comparible.

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier2 жыл бұрын

    I could be totally wrong, but after watching a video about all that Utrecht has been doing to facilitate biking I thought that they where more bike focused then Amsterdam?

  • @thijsvisser6305
    @thijsvisser63053 жыл бұрын

    Dear Eva, The Netherlans is though a small country but it is far bigger then Amsterdam or Utrecht. The shops in Amsterdam are not nescessarely also in other big city's as The Hague or Rotterdam or Eindhoven and so on.

  • @Man-in-the-green

    @Man-in-the-green

    3 жыл бұрын

    Don’t you think she already knows that. En doe wat aan je Engels: “are not necessarily also”...?

  • @DutchLabrat
    @DutchLabrat3 жыл бұрын

    The main cause of many differences is that Amsterdam over the last centuries was an international harbour and capital while Utrecht was the local market and administrative city for the country side around it. There is a reason the city and the province have the same name: The ancient bishopric (Sticht) of Utrecht. Amsterdam is international, Utrecht is more provincial. Mind you, this used to be other way around when Utrecht was the main harbour connecting Roman (....) trade on the river Rijn to the North Sea and England when Amsterdam....wasn't :)

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    3 жыл бұрын

    The old Rhein, the Utrecht Bishop needed to canalize the area all the way to Amsterdam, collecting taxes...

  • @ericdecler
    @ericdecler3 жыл бұрын

    When will you visit de zaanse schans??

  • @pingienator
    @pingienator3 жыл бұрын

    I don't go to Amsterdam much, but more often than not, when I went to a restaurant in Amsterdam and tried to order something, the waiter would respond with "Sorry, I don't speak Dutch." That's never happened here in Utrecht.

  • @mourlyvold64

    @mourlyvold64

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's pretty sad.

  • @HenkJanBakker
    @HenkJanBakker3 жыл бұрын

    Moving to Amsterdam is a dream. Moving to Utrecht is a... fact? I mean no foreigner has had a dream about living in Utrecht for some time. Makes all the difference in the world to the people it atracts.

  • @MyDune76
    @MyDune763 жыл бұрын

    I think Utrecht does have a tram. Not as many, but at least 1 line.

  • @sjoerd5629

    @sjoerd5629

    3 жыл бұрын

    3 lines; line 60 (Utrecht CS - Nieuwegein), line 61 (Utrecht CS - IJsselstein) and the newest one; line 22 (Utrecht CS - Utrecht Sciencepark P+R). Lines 60 and 61 are currently being renovated for the new trams (which require low platforms instead of the high ones the old trams used), so those are temporary out of service.

  • @Rob2

    @Rob2

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@sjoerd5629 They are the laughing stock of the city... line 22 took years longer than expected to be completed, and went way over budget. So you would think what can go wrong with the line 60/61 renovation? Well, technically it went almost to plan, but this time they forgot to get the right formal permission. So it still won't run for months to come, even while it is technically OK to run.

  • @You-mr3lo
    @You-mr3lo3 жыл бұрын

    Amsterdam vs utrecht? What about sHertogenbosch vs Breda?

  • @nswinoz3302
    @nswinoz33023 жыл бұрын

    Utrecht is the most central and beautiful cities that you can immediately recognise due to the cellars footpath canels. However when visiting you should really try A Dutch farm holiday in places like Montfoort or Gouda I have stayed at both places and have appreciated Farmlife there compare to many other countries like Ireland, England or Australia. Ijsselsteine again is a typical looking Dutch town but places like Houton with it's minimalist post war building design and architecture are so Dutch also? Just try to travel more within the Netherlands from Alkmaar and Groningen in the north Middelburg and even the more tourist places like Kinder Dijk that we have visited many times in the south. I don't believe there are any part we have not enjoyed, truly one of the most enjoyable countries in Europe to visit and drive in, so much that we keep coming back just to find more places of interest. NSW in Oz

  • @JoeyPsych
    @JoeyPsych3 жыл бұрын

    If you like musea, Leiden has a couple of good ones.

  • @royklein9206
    @royklein92063 жыл бұрын

    Jeeeej Foxy!!! :D

  • @theselecter
    @theselecter3 жыл бұрын

    Amsterdam is level 1: tourists and expats. Now ben je on level 2: onderweg naar heaven. Niveau 300 is Winterswijk: als je hier wordt geaccepteerd heb je het helemaal gemaakt!

  • @truusjenskens8485
    @truusjenskens84853 жыл бұрын

    Eva when will we hear you speaking dutch? As you]ve noticed the Dutch learned their languages, how about you?