This time, the canal, not the drunks
Amsterdam's infrastructure is starting to take some hits after years of deferred maintenance.
Amsterdam's infrastructure is starting to take some hits after years of deferred maintenance.
A border running through a pair of towns has now been shifted to where it should have been 150 years ago.
Amsterdam is ready to give bike- and scooter-sharing another try, but questions are already being raised about safety and sanitation.
At long last, non-stop train service in both directions between London and the Netherlands.
Amsterdam comes up with yet another plan to deal with outdoor urination.
A rare treasure is pulled from the river—and some think it should return!
Fears about audiences crowding too close have led to an order keeping Amsterdam's last barrel organ out of business until late November.
A Leiden museum is finally able to open its pandemic-delayed exhibit about pandemics.
With many closed and attendance limited at others, many museums are running short of cash needed to stay open.
A Dutch woman's neighbors are green with anger rather than envy at her color choice; the country's highest court has ordered her to repaint it.
A shortage of public WCs, especially for women and people with disabilities continues to be an issue in Amsterdam.
Lufthansa gets approval for a bailout, with conditions attached.
Four hundred years after the journey that ended on Plymouth Rock, a Dutch city remembers its part in the historic voyage.
Check out the Rijksmuseum's new super-hi-res photo image of one of the world's most famous paintings.
Amsterdam's war on what it considers excess tourism impact takes a new twist with licensed short-term rentals with a ban in the city center.