Rotterdam
City Guide

Rotterdam

Netherlands · Best time to visit: Apr-Sep.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €70.00/day
Best season Apr-Sep
Language Dutch
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Amsterdam
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Concrete, Steel, and Swagger — The City That Rose from Rubble

09:00

Rotterdam Centraal Station

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

The station's pointed stainless-steel canopy erupts from street level like a launched arrowhead — Benthem Crouwel's 2014 redesign is Rotterdam's architectural thesis statement in a single building. Morning light from the east catches the brushed metal panels and makes the entire façade glow. Stand at mid-plaza for the full triangular silhouette, and look for the original 1957 'Centraal Station' lettering preserved above the entrance — a deliberate echo of the old city rising from wartime ash.

Tip: The best photo is from the center of Stationsplein, about 40 meters back, with a wide-angle lens angled slightly upward to capture the full canopy. The clock tower fragment of the old 1957 station is visible behind the glass wall on the right side — a quietly powerful contrast most visitors walk right past.

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10:00

Cube Houses (Kijk-Kubus)

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk south along Coolsingel — Rotterdam's main boulevard — past the modern City Hall and Bijenkorf department store, then east on Hoogstraat toward Blaak; a 15-minute stroll through the commercial spine of the rebuilt city. Piet Blom's 1984 cluster of 38 bright-yellow cubes, each tilted 45 degrees onto its corner, still looks like nothing else in European architecture. Duck underneath the forest-like canopy of angled pillars, then cross to the Oude Haven marina for the postcard shot: cubes reflected in the harbor water with the Witte Huis — Europe's first skyscraper, built 1898 — standing behind them.

Tip: Skip the paid Show Cube interior (€3) — the exterior angles and Oude Haven reflection are far more photogenic. Walk to the east end of Oude Haven where the historic ships are moored; from there you can frame the cubes, the Witte Huis, and the Markthal arch all in one wide shot.

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12:00

Markthal

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €12

Cross Overblaak street — the Markthal's horseshoe-shaped arch towers directly ahead, a two-minute walk from the Cube Houses. The building itself is the first course: look straight up inside and you will see the Horn of Plenty, an 11,000-square-meter digital fresco of giant fruits, insects, and flowers painted across the 40-meter-high arched ceiling — the largest artwork in the Netherlands. Grab a broodje haring (herring sandwich, €4–5) from one of the fish stalls or a portion of freshly fried bitterballen (crispy beef croquettes, €6–7) from any Dutch snack stand on the ground floor.

Tip: Do not sit down at a restaurant inside the Markthal — they are overpriced and tourist-oriented. Graze from two or three stalls instead: the Surinamese roti stand and the fresh stroopwafel vendor near the south entrance are both excellent. Budget 10 minutes just to photograph the ceiling from the dead center of the ground floor, looking straight up.

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13:00

Erasmus Bridge

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Head south from the Markthal along Schiedamsedijk, then follow the Boompjes waterfront promenade where the Maas river opens up on your left and the Erasmus Bridge's white asymmetric pylon grows larger with every step — a 12-minute walk. Ben van Berkel's 802-meter cable-stayed bridge, nicknamed 'The Swan' for its elegant 139-meter pylon, is the silhouette that defines Rotterdam's skyline. Walk the full length across to the south bank — at the midpoint, stop and face upriver for the best panoramic cityscape photo.

Tip: The most dramatic head-on photo of the pylon is from Willemsplein, the small plaza on the north bank just before the bridge entrance. Early afternoon light (13:00–14:00) illuminates the cables from the southwest and gives the Swan a silver shimmer against the sky.

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14:15

Kop van Zuid — Wilhelmina Pier

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Step off the south end of the Erasmus Bridge and continue straight onto Wilhelminakade — supertall towers flank you on both sides as you walk into Rotterdam's answer to Manhattan, an 8-minute stroll. De Rotterdam, Rem Koolhaas's trio of stacked glass skyscrapers, dominates the pier like a vertical city within a city. At the western tip sits Hotel New York, the ornate Art Nouveau headquarters where the Holland-Amerika Lijn once sold one-way tickets to America — a million Europeans left from this exact spot.

Tip: For the best skyline-across-water panorama, walk to the western railing near Hotel New York and shoot east — you will get the Erasmus Bridge, De Rotterdam tower, and the full river sweep in one frame. If you have time before dinner, walk 10 minutes south into Katendrecht, a former sailor's quarter turned trendy food-and-art district worth a wander.

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19:00

Hotel New York

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €45

You are already at Wilhelmina Pier — Hotel New York sits at its western end, a five-minute walk along the waterfront railing. Dine in the restored Art Nouveau interior where emigrants once queued for passage to America: mahogany paneling, brass fittings, and original Holland-Amerika Lijn tiles surround every table. Start with the Hollandse garnalenkroket (Dutch shrimp croquette, €14), then order the catch of the day (market price, typically €22–26); average dinner runs €40–50 per person with one drink.

Tip: Reserve a terrace table facing north — the evening light across the Maas turns the Erasmus Bridge and city skyline into your farewell postcard. Avoid the cluster of restaurants on Boompjes along the north riverbank near the bridge; they are tourist traps charging double for mediocre food aimed at day-trippers who do not know better.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Rotterdam?

Most travelers enjoy Rotterdam in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Rotterdam?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Rotterdam?

A practical starting point is about €70 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Rotterdam?

A good first shortlist for Rotterdam includes Rotterdam Centraal Station, Cube Houses (Kijk-Kubus), Erasmus Bridge.