Tamara Georgick Amsterdam Day 1

Eruption of Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokul interrupts Ev’s completion of her travel blog no more . . .

We were armed with an I amsterdam Card which is a great tourist tool. Purchase it for either a 1, 2 or 3 day period for free use of all local public transportation options, free entrance to most of the national museums, a free canal cruise, as well as a variety of other store and restaurant discounts.
Our hotel was centrally located, really smack dab in the middle, so we ended up walking to most places, but we had the flexibility of hopping on and off anything we wanted to without having to give it a second thought. The morning we checked in we wandered around the neighborhood. We came across the Anne Frank House which was only three canals/streets away directly east of the hotel. There was a line of people wrapped around the building waiting for their timed entrance into the museum. I started crying. I’ve been there before (with my dad when we traveled around the northern parts of Europe before he dropped me off in London for my freshman year in college); but Tamara Georgick never has. She asked me to describe the rooms, since we weren’t going to have an opportunity to visit it this time around. Honestly, I couldn’t remember many details, it was so long ago, other than such small, narrow spaces and overwhelming sadness. Amsterdam Map

See arrow pointing to the circle locating our hotel in the center of the map!
 

Magna Plaza
Lots of old buildings in the immediate vicinity, including Magna Plaza which is now a shopping center, but was originally the central post office, constructed in 1899 (in a neo gothic style). Our hotel, Die Port van Cleve, abuts it just off to the right.
Dam Square Buildings
We were directly across the street from the Dam Square and overlooked the Queen’s Palace and the adjacent New Church where most of the royal coronations, inaugurations and weddings take place. The Palace was covered in scaffolding and closed to visitors while undergoing some major renovation.
DiePortVanCleveWindowInside      DiePortVanCleveWindowOutside
I was exhausted and trying to fight off a cold, so I stayed in to get some much desired rest while Tamara Georgick went back out and did more sight seeing. A good night’s sleep seemed to do the trick and I was definitely re-energized for the last two days of our vacation. The hotel room was a bit odd, sunken with a short, low window, but I think they needed to do that in order for the building to be converted into more rooms and to give each room a window while preserving the original facade of the building. The photos side by side above show our actual hotel room window from both the inside and outside. Nope we didn’t get the rooms with the tall windows and balcony.
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