Plan date: June 16, 2026 | Created: June 15, 2026
📍 7 stops · ⏱ ~9 h
A slow wander through Regentessekwartier's art nouveau streets, a browse along Weimarstraat, and an evening glass of wine at Anna Paulownaplein.
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A low-key spot on Weimarstraat for a morning coffee; the flat white is the one to get here.
Before 10:30 it's mostly remote workers with laptops; the lunch crowd starts drifting in around noon.
Weimarstraat runs through the heart of Regentessekwartier — wide, lined with 1900s mansions and facades with wrought-iron balconies and tiled panels.
This neighbourhood has a quieter, lived-in feel than the centre — young families, students, and a mix of independent shops that have been here for years.
A sunny square tucked between Regentessekwartier and , with benches under old trees and a quiet morning hum.
A tiny green courtyard hidden behind a gate on Regentesselaan — a pocket of quiet most people walk past without noticing.
The gate on Regentesselaan is unlocked during the day — push it open and you're in a walled garden with a pond and benches, completely silent.
A small vegetarian lunchroom on Weimarstraat — the quiche changes daily and the soup is always solid.
A path of stones from 196 countries, each one lit by a single flame — more striking than the palace itself.
We pass the gates; the building is closed to visitors but the front garden and the neo-Renaissance facade are worth a pause.
The Omniversum dome screens daily nature and science films on a giant curved screen — check what's playing when you arrive.
The dome films run on a set schedule — check the board at the entrance and pick the one starting closest to your arrival.
We walk through Statenkwartier's broad streets, past embassy buildings and townhouses — the neighbourhood has an international, unhurried feel.
A wine bar that opened in 2025 with over a hundred bottles — the terrace on the square catches the last of the afternoon light.
Ask for a glass from the by-the-glass list rather than committing to a full bottle — they rotate the open bottles weekly and the staff know the current picks well.
Sources give mixed signals about this spot — we recommend confirming before visiting.
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