The new economy has brought prosperity which is evident all around from the growing business zones and transformation of the general landscape surrounding ancient town houses and canals.
With about ¾ of a million of populace, the transformation of Amsterdam from a hippie haven to a buzzing business city is not yet complete. The culture of free thinking and collective living has not yet gone away. Only the free culture is not an offshoot of semi legal toxic and exotic plants, but a by-product of successful economic growth today.
Today’s Amsterdam does not welcome the hippie youth that thinks getting high on hash is a part of the city’s culture, but prefers a better class of people that have a spending capacity. Amsterdam is slowly transforming itself into a city where the pot-heads prevailed to a city you can enjoy without a big dent in your pocketbook.
Amsterdam historically has been a major trading post during the colonial times, the reason why you will find scattered town houses around the otherwise neatly aligned canals. These were made by the then wealthy tradesmen. Today these houses mostly house smoke shops, exotic night life and a string of brothels. This historical irony has been taken in stride by the local populace and which, by a collective decision, licensed the brothels and the sale of some drugs in licensed coffee shops. These places are still a major tourist attraction today.
Amsterdam is attempting to get away from its drug-fame and they are busy planning and remodeling a few town houses into various centers of innovative business. The citizens are quite involved with biking, tasting ethnic food or just relaxing and watching life from the sidelines reading newspapers on a sidewalk café.
Amsterdam has its own charm that casts a spell when you see the 1200 odd bridges lighted up over 150 odd canals. The glory of Amsterdam charms you further when it emerges form the mist in the mornings. The days could not more perfect for a visitor when he visits the flower market that floats, Rembrandt Museum, Jewish Historical Museum and the obvious social joints like nightclubs, brown cafes etc.
English is most prevalent language of Amsterdam; it is spoken fluently by a major portion of the populace. The basic attitude of people here is very friendly and carefree, as much that one could chat up a local in course of one beer.
Each province of Netherlands has its own tourist organization strewn around with multi lingual attendants. These Associations for Foreign Travel, as they are called or in short VVV (fay-fay-fay), book accommodations, help making travel arrangements and keeps the visitor abreast with latest programmes. They also publish Amsterdam Day by Day, a monthly magazine stating programmes for the month for a mere $2.50.
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