Skip to main content

Amsterdam opens underwater bike garages

Dutch authorities have built 11,000-bike parking beneath Amsterdam Central Station
By Adam Hill January 30, 2023 Read time: 1 min
Stationsplein has space for 7,000 bikes while IJboulevard will take 4,000 (image: City of Amsterdam)

Some cities talk about multimodal transport: Amsterdam just gets on and does it.

The Netherlands is famed for its cycling culture, and its latest move in making active travel and public transport more accessible is to open a 7,000-capacity bike garage, Stationsplein, under Open Havenfront, the water between the Prins Hendrikkade and Amsterdam Central Station.

The four-year project will be followed by the opening next month of IJboulevard - another, 4,000-capacity, underwater garage behind the station.

Putting them underground will give pedestrians more space around the railway station, which is a hub for national and international travel.

In the weeks after the opening, all bicycle racks are set to gradually disappear from the streets around the station.

There are already plans to create even more parking spaces for bicycles, the city says.

There have been other infrastructure improvements in the area, with wider footpaths and cycle paths created, and tram tracks and stops replaced.

Bike parking is free for the first 24 hours in the bicycle sheds, with payment made via debit card, public transport chip card, or with a bicycle tag which can be bought at the garages, or free with an annual subscription. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Stage Intelligence partners with Smovengo on Paris bike-share
    February 25, 2019
    Artificial intelligence (AI) company Stage Intelligence has linked up with a consortium in a bid to make a Paris bike-share scheme more efficient. Stage is partnering with Smovengo – a grouping which consists of Smoove, Moventia, Mobivia and Park Indigo - to deploy its Bico AI optimisation platform across Smovengo’s Vélib bike-share system in the French capital. The company says its system allows users to collect, manage and visualise data and turn it into actionable insights; it has already been used in
  • 7,000 TfL staff furloughed today
    April 27, 2020
    Transport for London (TfL)’s main source of income “has almost disappeared”.
  • MaaS: A global wave that’s starting to break
    January 3, 2024
    Mobility as a Service – or whatever we’re going to end up calling it – makes sense in a world which is looking for less carbon-intensive ways of getting around. John Nuutinen of SkedGo talks to Adam Hill
  • Littlepay joins Caltrans marketplace
    March 23, 2022
    Payment provider's products now available for California transit agencies to use