This museum on rails has been established in 1975, by a group of tram fanatics. They restored old electric trams from the beginning of the 20th C. and made them run on a separate tram line from Amsterdam to Amstelveen. Today The Electric Tram Line Museum has in its collection historic trains from different cities - Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Den Haag, Groningen, Utrecht, Vienna, Graz and Prague. Most of them are 70 years old, their original colors and all historical signs have been preserved. The trams are maintained in working condition to ride each Sunday on a 7 km. long tramway from Amsterdam to Bovenkerk/Amstelveen.
The historic tram line has on its way three stops in Amsterdamse Bos, where you may step out, walk in the park, have a meal in one of the restaurants, to return later also by tram to Amsterdam.
The feel
A real fun, especially for kids. The ride feels like taking a time vehicle hundred years back, into the beginnings of public transport in Europe.
Open: Only on Sundays - from Eastern Sunday in April until last Sunday in October, 11 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Check the Museum website for additional rides with the participation of Saint Nicholas before Christmas (in 2010: on November 27 and December 4).
Admissions
Return child € 2,-; return adult: € 4,-
ride one way: child € 1,-; adult: € 2,-
day ticket: child € 5,-; adult: € 10,-
the whole season pass: child € 25,-; adult: € 50,-
You may rent the whole wagon during the normal service for € 150,- (20 seats) or rent the motorcar (€ 295,-) and a wagon (€ 95,-) for a special occasion and ask the Museum to make a ride according to your schedule.
How to get there
Walking from the Concertgebouw along De Lairessestraat - a busy street for 15 minutes, continue on Cornelis Krusemanstraat; at the end of the street, behind the roundabout, you will see the old brick building of Haarlemmermeerstation - the initial station of the Museum Tram.
By public transport: tram line 16; by bus: line 145 (stop Krusemanstraat).
By car: driving from the ring A10, take an exit S108 (Amstelveen/VU) and drive direction the city centre. On a first big square (Stadionplein) take left on the traffic lights along Amstelveenseweg. Drive for about one mile till you reach a roundabout. The old building on the left is Haarlemmermeerstation. Park your car in any of the streets (free on Sundays).
Address
Electrische Museumtramlijn in Amsterdam
Harlemmermeerstation
Amstelveenseweg 264
1075 XV Amsterdam
Telephone (information, weekdays, 9 a.m.- 4 p.m.) +31 20 618 85 28
Telephone on the service days (Sundays): +31 20 673 75 38
Homepage: www.museumtramlijn.org
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