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| The classic view of the Netherlands. Photo: Depositphotos.com |
The Dutch tourist
board is to stop actively promoting the Netherlands as a holiday destination
because its main attractions – the canals, tulips and windmills – are becoming
both overcrowded, the Telegraaf said on Monday.
In future the NBTC will focus
on trying to spread visitors to other parts of the country ‘by putting the
spotlight on unknown areas’ and on limiting the problems caused in the busiest
periods.
The change of position is part of the organisation’s strategy for the
period up to 2030. ‘To control visitor flow and leverage the opportunities that
tourism brings with it, we must act now. Instead of destination promotion, it
is now time for destination management,’ the NBTC report said.
‘Many other
regions should also profit from the expected growth in tourism and we will
stimulate new offerings. The NBTC will become much more of a data and expertise
centre,’ a spokeswoman told the Telegraaf.
The organisation expects at least 29
million tourists will visit the Netherlands a year by 2030, compared with 19
million in 2018. Last year it developed the HollandCity to try to spread
tourists outside the main hotspots of Amsterdam, fishing villages and the bulb
fields.
HollandCity strategy which involves promoting the Netherlands as a
single metropolis with lots of districts, such as Lake District Friesland and
Design District Eindhoven.
Traffic chaos
This Easter, the Keukenholf bulb
garden and the Kinderdijk windmill district impossible to reach for a time
because so many people had turned out to visit them.
The congestion forced the
director of the Keukenhof to discribe the situation as ‘completely
unacceptable’ for locals.
Amsterdam too has been grappling with over-tourism
and is attempting to spread visitors throughout the city.

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