Why Rotterdam needs a local guide
Rotterdam is the anti-Amsterdam. No canals lined with 17th-century houses. Instead: the Cube Houses, the Markthal, the Erasmus Bridge, and buildings that look like they came from a different decade every block. The food scene in Katendrecht — the old red-light district turned food hub — is serious. The harbor is the largest in Europe and still working.
Rotterdam gets around 3 million visitors a year, and that number keeps climbing as travelers realize Amsterdam is not the only Dutch city worth visiting. Most visitors come for the architecture — the Cube Houses, the Markthal ceiling, the Erasmus Bridge — and leave having barely scratched the food scene. Katendrecht was the roughest neighborhood in the city ten years ago. Now the Fenix Food Factory operates out of a former warehouse with a brewery, a cheese maker, and a coffee roaster all under one roof, and the restaurants along the Rijnhaven waterfront are serious. To become a tour guide in Rotterdam means explaining a city that was destroyed and chose to rebuild as something nobody expected. Every block looks different because every block was designed by a different architect with a different idea. Delfshaven is the only neighborhood that survived the 1940 bombing, and walking its canals feels like stepping into the Amsterdam that Rotterdam specifically decided not to become. Become a tour guide in Rotterdam and you get to tell the story of a city that turned destruction into an identity. You walk people through the Markthal, the Witte de With street galleries, and the harbor that still moves more cargo than any port in Europe. Become a tour guide in Rotterdam to show visitors Europe's most unusual skyline and the food culture growing underneath it.