The Dutch House Guide

Dutch House

Dutch houses (particularly those found in Amsterdam) are extremely dangerous and under no circumstances should they be bought, rented, lived in, squatted in, visited or stepped foot therein. When looking for accommodation in Holland it is advised to consider the much safer alternative of living on the streets. Anyone who has spent any amount of time in a Dutch abode (and has lived to tell the tale) will be able to tell you about their many strange quirks and dangers. An Englishman’s home might be his castle but a Dutchman’s home is a deathtrap.

Possibly the greatest health hazard that exists in a Dutch house are Dutch stairs. Dutch stairs are widely regarded as the most dangerous type of stairs in the world for one simple reason; they are insanely steep. So steep in fact that they are better thought of as ladders and in the case of spiral stair cases; twisty ladders.

Descending Dutch stairs is extra dangerous. Even people who have been living in Dutch homes for a very long time can still fall victim to them because (as well as being very steep) Dutch stairs are very patient.

All it takes is one sleepy morning when you forget that you are wearing your pair of extra slippery socks and one quick unexpected vertical trip later you will have a bruise the size of Belgium on your ass (possibly with a neighboring country on the other cheek). And god forbid that there is a window at the bottom of those stairs because if there is you might find yourself suddenly propelled across the street into a nearby canal (as I once nearly was).

As a rule, if your Dutch living-abode includes an upstairs area it is simply safer to forget that it exists at all and sleep in the living room, kitchen or hallway. This has the added benefit of giving the mice their own area of the house because as we all know every Dutch house comes with mice as standard (and they can be very territorial).

If fear of falling down the stairs is not enough to made you feel uncertain about your balance then the fact that almost every Dutch house leans will not help matters. One of the side effects of building houses on areas that used to be swamp or a part of the sea is that the ground is very soft and houses tend to develop a ‘slight’ tilt over time. The combination of Dutch stairs and tilting floors often gives the feeling of living in a fun ground fun house.

As well as interfering with your sense of balance this presents a very real danger that one day your whole house might slide off into the adjacent canal. This is particularly alarming if it is only discovered upon waking up in your bed as it floats alongside a canal tour boat. For this reason it is strongly advised to have a hard hat and some sort of flotation device nearby at all times.

It is not all bad though. The one thing you don’t have to worry about in a Dutch house is the wiring. With everything else that can go wrong you would be forgiven for thinking that the fuses would need changing every time you so much as point at an electrical outlet. However, as luck would have it Dutch fuses are extremely strong and will survive the greatest of electrical fires. Even if every single lighting fixture and electrical appliance is flickering like an evil spirit is trying to manifest itself you do not have to worry about the electricity failing (and that it is most likely those mice chewing through the wiring again since they have finished your favorite box of cereal).

It is a comforting thought to know that when your house has burnt down to the ground and all your worldly possessions are gone you will still be able to salvage the fuses from the wreckage for use in your next Dutch house (if you choose to take the risk again).

Stuart

Stuart is an accident prone Englishman who has been living in the Netherlands since 2001. Even his move to the country was an unintentional accident, the result of replying to a cryptic job advertisement he found one day in a local British magazine. Since then he has learned to love the Dutch (so much so that he married one of them) and now calls the country home. He started the blog Invading Holland in 2006 as a place to share his strange stories of language misunderstandings, cultural confusions and his own accident prone nature.

27 Responses

  1. Anneke says:

    Hahaha! “arty artist” *snort* Don’t feel so very arty, but maybe I’m surrounded by artiness, and don’t stand out, or notice it? :P

  2. Ronald says:

    Of course the electricity fuses in The Netherlands are among the top worldwide. You wouldn’t want your TV to turn black every time the 10.000 Watts of lighting on the attic to grow their special vegetables turns on.

  3. Amanda says:

    This is so true. The first house I lived in here had stairs that were indeed the equivalent of a ladder. So we got a nice man in to change them. He arrived with his helper to change the stairs and we went out and left them to it. When we came back the stairs had been changed and the nice men had gone. However, there was one small problem. The top of the stairs led to a drop back down to the ground floor. The stairs had been put in a different place than the old stairs. We called the nice man and he said “you asked me to put new stairs in – that is what I did. We don’t do floors. We do stairs.” So off to the Praxis it was to fill up the hole in our ceiling and make the stairs usable. There’s a lesson in there – be specific!!!!! Dangerous indeed…..

  4. Invader Stu says:

    Keith – We have electricity but it is all generated by steam and mice on tiny treadmills.

    Orangesplaash – And more Barbie’s run down house than Barbie’s dream house.

    Anita – Hehe. Good one.

    A touch of Dutch – Thank yuo

    Kerryanne – Been there and down there (bottom of the stairs very suddenly).

    Rakesh Rajagopal – I guess that means the stairs are just as bad in Friesland

    Anneke – You have a very arty blog :)

    Ronald – A very good point. I know I get annoyed every my special vegetable plantation courses that to happen

  5. Invader Stu says:

    Amanda – That’s so bad that he thought that would be ok. What was he expecting you to do. Climb up stairs and then jump?

  6. French Bean says:

    So let me get this straight: you are at risk on a daily basis by residing in Dutch houses, yet you complain about how a trip to Germany became a test of survival? Hmmm…

  7. Yorrick says:

    Tsk tsk Stu, Groningen is not in Friesland.

  8. Just a Plane Ride Away says:

    Ha! I fell down the stairs in my Dutch home twice! And I am not normally a clumsy person. My dog even fell down the stairs! How sad is that?

    And yes, LOL, those darn fuses. Thank goodness we don’t have to deal with them anymore ;-)

  9. Invader_Stu says:

    French Bean – It’s how I roll

    Yorrick – Er… Oh… I meant it’s close by….. Look a bird! *runs away*

    Just a Plane Ride Away – I don’t think your dog has to be ashamed. Even a cat could fall down Dutch stairs and not land on its feet.

  10. Rutger says:

    Even though you wrote a pretty funny piece here and there’s some thruth in it, it’s a shame that it’s pretty clear you’ve only been to Amsterdam, which foreigners hold about synonym to The Netherlands, which is in turn often confused with Holland altogether.

    Calling The Netherlands “Holland” is like calling the USA California or Texas.

    But nevertheless, a funny writing!

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