For other places named Rotterdam, see Rotterdam (disambiguation)
Rotterdam (), located in the province of South Holland, is the second largest municipality in the Netherlands. The city has the largest port in Europe and was until recently the world's busiest port; it is found on the banks of the river the Nieuwe Maas, one of the streams in the delta formed by the Rhine and Meuse rivers. The name "Rotterdam" is derived from a dam in a small river, the Rotte, which joins the Nieuwe Maas at the heart of the city.
In some occasions, Rotterdam is listed as part of the Rotterdam-Den Haag(The Hague) urban area, which has a population of 3,345,000 and also consists of cities like Schiedam, Vlaardingen, Spijkenisse, Rijswijk, Delft and Zoetermeer. This area is considered to be the 8th biggest urban area of Europe.
Apart from the city itself the municipality consists of the following towns, villages and townships: Beverwaard, Charlois (including Heijplaat), Delfshaven, Feijenoord, Hillegersberg-Schiebroek, Hoek van Holland, Hoogvliet, IJsselmonde, Kralingen-Crooswijk, Noord, Overschie, Pernis, Prins Alexander, and the industrial and port areas Botlek, Eemshaven, Europoort, Maasvlakte, Spaanse Polder, Vondelingenplaat, Waalhaven. 0042
Rotterdam has the largest port in Europe. Since 2004 Asian ports like Singapore and Shanghai have taken over its world leading position. In 2004 Rotterdam was the seventh largest port in the world in terms of containers (TEU) handled.
Most important for the port of Rotterdam are the petrochemical industry and general cargo transhipment handlings. The harbour functions as an important transit point for transport of bulk and other goods between the European continent and other parts of the world. From Rotterdam goods are transported by ship, river barge, train or road. Since 2000 the Betuweroute, a fast cargo railway from Rotterdam to Germany, has been under construction. Large oil refineries are located west of the city. The rivers Meuse and Rhine also provide excellent access to the hinterland.
In the first half of the twentieth century the port activities moved from the centre towards the North Sea. The Nieuwe Waterweg was dug from Rotterdam to the North Sea, a canal to disembogue the shallow Rhine and Meuse. The Nieuwe Waterweg was ready in 1872 and all sorts of industrial activity formed on the banks of this canal.
Rotterdam's harbour territory has been enlarged by the construction of the Europoort (gate to Europe) complex along the mouth of the Nieuwe Waterweg, and by the Maasvlakte in the North Sea near Hoek van Holland. The lay-out of a second Maasvlakte was the subject of political debate in the 1990s, because it would be partly government-financed. Construction started in the summer of 2004 (press release, PDF in Dutch).
The port of Rotterdam grew out, slowly but steadily, to a port of importance; in Rotterdam one of the six chambers of the VOC, or the Netherlands East India Company, was seated.
The greatest spurt of growth, both in port activity and population, followed after the already mentioned completion of the Nieuwe Waterweg in 1872. The city and harbor started to expand on the South bank of the river. Delivering evidence of its rapid growth and success is the skyscraper in the French Chateau style, the White House, or Witte Huis, built in the American spirit of office buildings in 1898; its height is 45 m, it was at the time of completion the tallest office building in Europe.
On May 14, 1940 Rotterdam was bombed by the German Luftwaffe, on the last of five days of war in the Netherlands (save Zeeland). The heart of the city was almost completely destroyed, which Ossip Zadkine later expressed strikingly with his statue Stad zonder hart (City without a heart). The statue is located near the Leuvehaven, not far from the Erasmusbrug in the north of the city. From the 1950s through the 1970s the city was rebuilt. It remained quite windy and open until the city councils from the 1980s on began developing an active architectural policy. Daring and new styles of apartments, office buildings and recreation facilities resulted in a more 'livable' city center with a new skyline. In the 1990s a new business centre on the south bank of the river, the Kop van Zuid has been built. The White House survived the bombing campaign.
Rotterdam, Amsterdam, The Hague and a number of smaller cities in the west of the country are expanding towards each other to the extent that the entire area is sometimes denoted as a single metropole known as Randstad.
Rotterdam is the city of the Netherlands with the highest percentage of non-western foreigners. Nearly half the population is not born or have at least one parent who is not born in the Netherlands. The city has one of the biggest' Cape Verdian communities in the world outside of Cape Verde and the biggest Antillean community outside of the Dutch Antilles.
There are also three Hogescholen in Rotterdam. These schools award their students a Bachelor's degree. The three Hogescholen are Hogeschool Rotterdam, Hogeschool INHOLLAND and Hogeschool voor Muziek en Dans.
Students in higher education comprise around 20% of the Rotterdam's population.
The city is home to the Rotterdam Academy of Fine Arts.
Rotterdam is currently going through somewhat of a renaissance, with some urban renewal projects featuring ambitious architecture, an increasingly sparkling nightlife, and a host of summer festivals celebrating the city's multicultural population and identity, such as the Caribbean-inspired 'Summer Carnival', the Dance Parade, Rotterdam 666, the Metropolis popfestival and the World Port days. With the International Filmfestival in january, Poetry International Festival in June, the Valery Gergiev Festival in September they make Rotterdam a real event city.
The self-image of the city is that of a no-nonsense workers' city. In that sense, there is a healthy competition with Amsterdam, which is often viewed as the 'cultural' capital of the Netherlands.
Rotterdam has had a rich hiphop scene since the early 1980s. It is also the home of Gabber, a type of music popular in the mid-1990s, with hard beats and samples. Bands like Neophyte and Rotterdam Terror Corps (RTC) started all in Rotterdam.
Rotterdam is also famous for its Kubuswoningen or cube houses build by an architect Piet Blom in 1984. In addition to that there are many international well known architects based in Rotterdam like O.M.A (Rem Koolhaas), MVRDV and Neutelings & Riedijk to name a few. Several young and upcoming offices like Star (strategies + architecture) and board are also based in Rotterdam.
Rotterdam houses several of the tallest structures in the Netherlands.
Rotterdam has a reputation in being a platform for the architectural discurse and education. This is obvious by the Berlage Institute a postgraduate laboratory of architecture, and the NAi (Netherlands Architecture Institute), which is open to the public and has various very good exhibitions on architecture and urban planning issues.
Rotterdam is standing in the best European SkylineTop together with Frankfurt, Warsaw and Paris. More highrise projects are started in this city.
Rotterdam has its own annual international marathon, which offers one of the fastest courses in the world. From 1985 until 1998 the world record was set in Rotterdam, first by Carlos Lopes and later in 1988 by Belayneh Dinsamo. The marathon starts and ends on the Coolsingel in the heart of Rotterdam.
A modern shopping venue is de 'Beurstraverse', also informally called 'Koopgoot'. The Koopgoot crosses the Coolsingel at substreet level.
Opening hours shops City center, Feijenoord (Kop van Zuid) and Delfshaven: Monday 11am-6pm; Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 9:30am-6pm; Friday 9:30am-9 pm; Saturday 09:30am-5 or 6pm; Sunday 12noon-5 or 6pm.
Rotterdam has the largest port of Europe. The Port of Rotterdam has a strong relationship with the Port of Shanghai, the only port in the world exceeding the port of Rotterdam in terms of containers and oil shipped.
The Erasmus University has a strong focus on research and education in management and economics. The University is located on the east side of the city and is surrounded by numerous multinational firms. On Brainpark I, Brainpark II, Brainpark III and 'Het Rivium' you can find offices from Deloitte, PWC, AIG, KPMG, CMG, Procter & Gamble, Coca Cola Company, Cap Gemini, Ernst and Young etc. In the centre of the city you find the above mentioned Unilever offices, but also Robeco, Fortis (including Mees Pierson and Stad Rotterdam Verzekeringen) ABN AMRO, ING (Nationale Nederlanden) and the Rotterdam WTC.
Rotterdam is well connected in international, national, regional and local public transport systems.
See also Hofplein Line.
See also: List of mayors of Rotterdam
Cities in the Netherlands | Cities on the Rhine | Port cities | Municipalities of South Holland | Towns in South Holland
روتردام | Rotterdam | Ротердам | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | Ρότερνταμ | Róterdam | Roterdamo | رتردام | Rotterdam | Róterdan - Rotterdam | 로테르담 | Rotterdam | Gemeente Rotterdam | Rotterdam | רוטרדם | Roterdama | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | ロッテルダム | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | Roterdão | Rotterdam | Роттердам | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | Rotterdam | ร็อตเตอร์ดัม | Rotterdam | 鹿特丹
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