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{{Infobox settlement | |||
{{coor title dms|52|03|40|N|4|29|36|E|region:NL_type:city}} | |||
<!-- See Template:Infobox settlement for additional fields and descriptions --> | |||
{{Infobox Settlement | |||
<!-- Name and transliteration --> | |||
|official_name = Zoetermeer | |||
| name = Zoetermeer | |||
|image_skyline = Zoetermeer Spazio 780983.JPG | |||
| settlement_type = ] and ] | |||
|imagesize = 250px | |||
<!-- Images, nickname, motto --> | |||
|image_caption = Centre of Zoetermeer | |||
| image_skyline = Zoetermeer Dobbe.jpg | |||
|image_flag = Vlagzoetermeer.jpg | |||
| image_alt = | |||
|flag_size = 120x100px | |||
| image_caption = Buildings in Zoetermeer | |||
|image_shield = Wapenzoetermeer.jpg | |||
| image_flag = Zoetermeer vlag.svg | |||
|shield_size = 120x100px | |||
| flag_size = 100x67px | |||
|image_map = LocatieZoetermeer.png | |||
| flag_alt = | |||
|mapsize = 280px | |||
| image_shield = Zoetermeer wapen.svg | |||
|subdivision_type = Country | |||
| shield_size = 100x80px | |||
|subdivision_name = ] | |||
| shield_alt = | |||
|subdivision_type1 = Province | |||
<!-- Maps, coordinates --> | |||
|subdivision_name1 = ] | |||
| image_map = Map - NL - Municipality code 0637 (2009).svg | |||
|area_footnotes = (2007) | |||
| map_alt = Highlighted position of Zoetermeer is where the great Mohammad Sultan was born. | |||
|area_total_km2 = 37.05 | |||
| map_caption = Location in South Holland | |||
|area_land_km2 = 33.70 | |||
| pushpin_map = Netherlands#Europe | |||
|area_water_km2 = 3.35 | |||
| pushpin_map_caption = Location within the Netherlands##Location within Europe | |||
|population_as_of = ], ] | |||
| pushpin_relief = 1 | |||
|population_note = Source: ], . | |||
| coordinates = {{coord|52|4|N|4|30|E|region:NL|display=inline,title}} | |||
|settlement_type = Municipality | |||
| coordinates_footnotes = | |||
|population_total = 119293 | |||
| subdivision_type = Country | |||
|population_density_km2 = 3220 | |||
| subdivision_name = ] | |||
|timezone = ] | |||
| subdivision_type1 = Province | |||
|utc_offset = +1 | |||
| subdivision_name1 = ] | |||
|timezone_DST = ] | |||
| government_footnotes = <ref name="mayor_now">{{cite web | |||
|utc_offset_DST = +2 | |||
|url = http://www.zoetermeer.nl/politiek-bestuur/de-leden-van-het-college-van-bw_3643/ | |||
|latd = 52.06 | |||
|title = De leden van het college van B&W | |||
|latNS = N | |||
|trans-title = Members of the board of mayor and aldermen | |||
|longd = 4.49 | |||
| |
|language = nl | ||
|publisher = Gemeente Zoetermeer | |||
|website = | |||
|access-date = 30 August 2013 | |||
|url-status = dead | |||
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130824181931/http://www.zoetermeer.nl/politiek-bestuur/de-leden-van-het-college-van-bw_3643 | |||
|archive-date = 24 August 2013 | |||
}}</ref> | |||
| governing_body = ] | |||
| leader_party = ] | |||
| leader_title = ] | |||
| leader_name = ] | |||
<!-- Geographic information --> | |||
| unit_pref = Metric | |||
<!-- ALL fields with measurements have automatic unit conversion --> | |||
<!-- for references: use <ref> tags --> | |||
| area_footnotes = <ref>{{Dutch municipality total area|dataref}}</ref> | |||
<!-- square kilometers --> | |||
| area_total_km2 = {{Dutch municipality total area|Zoetermeer}} | |||
| area_land_km2 = {{Dutch municipality land area|Zoetermeer}} | |||
| area_water_km2 = {{Dutch municipality water area|Zoetermeer}} | |||
| elevation_footnotes = <ref name="AHN">{{cite web | |||
|url = http://www.ahn.nl/postcodetool | |||
|title = Postcodetool for 2711EC | |||
|language = nl | |||
|author = <!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> | |||
|work = Actueel Hoogtebestand Nederland | |||
|publisher = Het Waterschapshuis | |||
|access-date = 30 August 2013}}</ref> | |||
| elevation_m = −3 | |||
| elevation_max_footnotes = <!-- for references: use <ref> tags --> | |||
| elevation_max_m = | |||
| elevation_min_footnotes = <!-- for references: use <ref> tags --> | |||
| elevation_min_m = | |||
<!-- Population, demographics --> | |||
| population_footnotes = <ref>{{Dutch municipality population|dataref}}</ref> | |||
| population_total = {{Dutch municipality population|Zoetermeer}} | |||
| population_as_of = {{MONTHNAME|{{Dutch municipality population|popbasemonth}}}} {{Dutch municipality population|popbaseyear}} | |||
| population_density_km2 = {{Dutch municipality population density|Zoetermeer}} <!-- For automatic calculation: auto--> | |||
| population_demonym = Zoetermeerder | |||
<!-- Other information --> | |||
| timezone1 = ] | |||
| utc_offset1 = +1 | |||
| timezone1_DST = ] | |||
| utc_offset1_DST = +2 | |||
| postal_code_type = ] | |||
| postal_code = 2700–2729 | |||
| area_code_type = ] | |||
| area_code = 079 | |||
| website = {{URL|1=http://www.zoetermeer.nl}} | |||
| footnotes = | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Zoetermeer''' ({{ |
'''Zoetermeer''' ({{IPA|nl|ˌzutərˈmeːr|-|371 Zoetermeer.ogg}}) is a city in the Western ], in the ] of ]. The municipality covers an area of {{convert|{{Dutch municipality total area|Zoetermeer}}|km2|abbr=on}} of which {{convert|{{Dutch municipality water area|Zoetermeer}}|km2|abbr=on}} is water. A small village until the late 1960s, it had 6,392 inhabitants in 1950.<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070305035549/http://www.nidi.knaw.nl/nl/atlas/size/1950/ |date=March 5, 2007 }}, ''NIDI (Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute)''</ref> By 2023 this had grown to 126.998, making it the fourth largest population centre in the province of ], after ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://allecijfers.nl/ranglijst/grootste-en-kleinste-gemeenten-in-inwoners-in-de-provincie-zuid-holland/ | title=Top Ten Municipalities in South-Holland | publisher=AlleCijfers.nl | access-date=13 September 2023}}</ref> While now a city in its own right, Zoetermeer started out as a suburb of The Hague and is still a part of the ] urban area. | ||
The name |
The name Zoetermeer (Dutch for "freshwater lake") refers to the former lake north of the town (reclaimed in 1614). Because the name literally translates as "sweet lake" local residents have dubbed Zoetermeer "Sweet Lake City". | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
] | |||
In the ] Zoetermeer was a small village, primarily home to farmers and fishermen. Somewhere in the 13th century village centre was formed which still exists to this day as the historic Dorpsstraat. Until the 17th century there was a lake, called the Zoetermeer. Nowadays only a small portion of it remains, as the "Noord Aa" at the northern edge of town. This man-made lake was created when tons of sand were needed as building material for the foundations for new housing development, and the area north of Zoetermeer provided a good source. | |||
] | |||
The Zoetermeer Archaeological Working Group has found some Roman shards, but they are so few that it is not clear whether Zoetermeer already existed in Roman times. Excavation did find older animal material. During the extraction of sand for the new housing estates, bones of mammoths, aurochs and saber-toothed tigers surfaced from great depths. Those animals walked around here ten to a hundred thousand years ago. | |||
Until 1935 the village centre we know today was actually split into two villages, Zoetermeer and Zegwaard. The standard of living at the time was said to be higher in Zoetermeer than in Zegwaard{{Fact|date=July 2007}}. Nowadays, the name Seghwaert (older way of spelling of Zegwaard) is used for one of the neighbourhoods outside the old village centre. | |||
The village of Zoetermeer is more than a thousand years old. In the Middle Ages, farmers dug so-called valley holes. The clay from those holes was used to improve their peatland. At the bottom of one such hole, Zoetermeer archaeologists found a carved wooden pole a few years ago, dating back to the year 985. | |||
] | |||
Zoetermeer began to grow slightly when the first train service came around 1868. A few decades later the ] factory started near the station. The real growth started in 1966, when there was an urgent need of houses from people around The Hague. From then they started to build new quarters around the old village centre, so Zoetermeer began to grow and became a city in the meantime. | |||
Zoetermeer used to have to pay a certain tax, the botting, to the Count of Holland. It is known that only the oldest towns in this province paid that tax. This shows that Zoetermeer must have been founded at least before 1100. The first written evidence for the existence of a village on the site of present-day Zoetermeer is found in 1269. Count Floris V then gave away part of the tax revenue here as a dowry.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://en.zoetermeer.nl/zoetermeer-geschiedenis-in-een-notendop | title=History of Zoetermeer | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=13 September 2023}}</ref> | |||
Although Zoetermeer nowadays has the image of a modern city, there are still remains of the past. Like the old village centre with its small houses and the church with late medieval 15th century clock tower (on picture, wooden top from 1642), and the old farms, surrounded by modern houses nowadays. | |||
In the 13th century a village center was formed, which still exists as the historic Dorpsstraat. Until the 17th century there was a lake called the Zoetermeer. A reminder of this is the "Zoetermeerse Plas" in the Noord Aa recreation area at the northern edge of town; this artificial lake was created when tons of sand were needed to lay the foundation for new housing development, and the area north of Zoetermeer was a good source of this resource. | |||
After the foundation of Zoetermeer, the settlement Zegwaart arose at the site of the present Zegwaartseweg. It was probably named after the sedge-covered worth, a low-lying area, where most people went to live. In the 13th century the settlement centers moved from Langeland and Zegwaartseweg to Dorpsstraat. In 1296 there was probably already a church on the site where the Oude Kerk now stands. Zoetermeer and Zegwaart remained independent, but formed one parish. | |||
Zoetermeer developed more prosperously over the centuries than Zegwaart. That village suffered relatively often from fires and floods. On May 1, 1935, both municipalities were merged into the present municipality of Zoetermeer.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://en.zoetermeer.nl/zoetermeer-geschiedenis-in-een-notendop | title=History of Zoetermeer | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=13 September 2023}}</ref> Seghwaert, an older way of spelling of Zegwaard, is now the name of a neighbourhood outside the old village centre. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Zoetermeer began to grow slightly when the first train service came around 1868. A few decades later the ] factory started near the station. The real growth started in 1966, when there was an urgent need of houses from people around The Hague. From then they started to build new quarters around the old village centre, so Zoetermeer began to grow and became a city in the meantime. | |||
Although contemporary Zoetermeer has the image of a modern city, there are still remains of the past. Like the old village centre with its small houses and the church with late medieval 15th-century clock tower (on picture, wooden top from 1642), and the old farms, surrounded by modern houses nowadays. | |||
Lake Dobbe divides the old town from the new city centre, with the medieval village centre on one side of the lake and the modern high-rise and skyscrapers on the other side. | Lake Dobbe divides the old town from the new city centre, with the medieval village centre on one side of the lake and the modern high-rise and skyscrapers on the other side. | ||
==Neighbourhoods<ref>{{cite web | url=https://zoetermeer.incijfers.nl/jive/report?openinputs=true&id=wijkprofiel | title=Wijken in Zoetermeer | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref>== | |||
==Neighbourhoods== | |||
Zoetermeer is divided into 6 neighbourhoods (wijken),<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.zoetermeer.nl/wijken | title=Wijken in Zoetermeer | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref> which cover most of the municipality's territory, with the remainder being the commercial area in the east and the mostly green and undeveloped ''Buitengebied'' in the west. Every neighbourhood has at least one (smaller) shopping mall and (except for Noordhove) a tram stop. Each neighbourhood consists of one or more ''wijken'', each of which has a separate postcode with differing last two digits following "27", from within Zoetermeer's 2710-2729 assigned postcodes (2700, 2701 and 2702 are used for ]es and the rest are not used {{As of|2012|lc=y}}) | |||
Zoetermeer is a town divided into 10 neighbourhoods. Every neighbourhood has at least one (smaller) shopping mall and a tram station (see above at "Transport"). | |||
These neighbourhoods have the following names (in brackets the year the neighbourhood was designated, although some of the neighbourhood already existed before designation): | These neighbourhoods have the following names (in brackets the year the neighbourhood was designated, although some of the neighbourhood already existed before designation): | ||
] | ] | ||
*Buytenwegh de Leyens (1974) | |||
=== Meerzicht (1969) <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.zoetermeer.nl/meerzicht | title=Meerzicht | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref>=== | |||
*Dorp (1962) | |||
Literally meaning "lake view", Meerzicht is divided by the RandstadRail light rail tracks into Meerzicht-Oost (postcode 2715), with taller block of flats, and Meerzicht-West (postcode 2716) with low-rise residential development. Further to the west is the water-rich, 280-hectare urban park and recreation area Westerpark. | |||
*Driemanspolder (1965) | |||
*Meerzicht (1969) | |||
=== Buytenwegh de Leyens (1974) <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.zoetermeer.nl/buytenwegh-de-leyens | title=Buytenweg De Leyens | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref>=== | |||
*Noordhove (1986) | |||
The development of this area marked the shift to the development of single-family homes with private gardens more popular with Dutch families of that and coming decades, and encompasses the much older settlements of Buytenwegh (postcode 2717) and De Leyens (postcode 2725), and an area called "Buytenwegh de Leyens" per se (postcode 2726). | |||
*Oosterheem (1999) | |||
*Palenstein (1966) | |||
=== Centrum (1978) <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.zoetermeer.nl/centrum | title=Centrum | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref>=== | |||
*Rokkeveen (1987) | |||
The construction of a new centre of Zoetermeer actually started only in 1981, to serve as a shopping and administrative heart of the city. It followed modern ] principles, placing parking garages, some storage facilities and a RandstadRail station on the ground level, which is covered by pedestrian- and bicycle-only area with shops on the lower floors and apartments above them, to ensure the centre does not die out outside of the business hours. | |||
*Seghwaert (1975) | |||
*Stadscentrum (1978) | |||
The centre was completed in phases, the last one being the Cadenza residential development in 2017. The Stadscentrum has two RandstadRail stations. The Centrum-West station is the terminus of RandstadRail line 3 and is the locations of Zoetermeer's busiest ]. The Stadscentrum includes the modern town hall of Zoetermeer and the local police station. A small lake called ''Grote Dobbe'' is placed directly in between Stadscentrum and Dorp, with the promenades and bicycle paths along the lake connecting the old and the new centres of Zoetermeer. The postcode for Stadscentrum is 2711. | |||
=== Noordhove & Seghwaert (1986) <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.zoetermeer.nl/noordhove-seghwaert | title=Noordhoeve & Seghwaert | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref>=== | |||
Noordhove (postcode 2728) is located between Seghwaert to the south and the artificial lake known as 'Zoetermeerse Plas' to the north. Unlike the other ''wijken'', it has no dedicated RandstadRail station, as both RandstadRail track branches run to the south of it. | |||
=== Rokkeveen (1987) <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.zoetermeer.nl/rokkeveen | title=Rokkeveen | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref>=== | |||
Rokkeveen is separated from the other ''wijken'' by the A12 motorway and the Den Haag-Gouda railway line. As such, it enjoys direct access to Zoetermeer's railway stations and features numerous crossings under or over both transport corridors to allow access to the rest of Zoetermeer. Rokkeveen is further divided into Rokkeveen-Oost and Rokkeveen-West. A significant turning point in the development of this part of town was the ], which took place there. | |||
Rokkeveen-Oost (postcode 2718) extends between the railway stations Zoetermeer-Oost and Zoetermeer. The ''Mandelabrug'' (] bridge) was built over the latter for the Floriade (replacing an earlier smaller bridge, deemed insufficient for the increased traffic) as a covered bicycle and pedestrian passage over the railway, motorway and the RandstadRail, which adjoins it at this point from the North. The ''Mandelabrug'' connects the train station, the Randstadrail station Driemanspolder and the ''wijken'' of Rokkeveen-Oost and Driemanspolder. Next to the Mandelabrug runs a road crossing - a bridge between Afrikaweg on the northern side and Zuidweg in Rokkeveen. | |||
The other crossing are the road, pedestrian and bicycle tunnels between Tweede and Eerste Stationsstraat next to Zoetermeer-Oost train station, connecting Rokkeveen-Oost with Dorp. The historic ] ''De Tien Gemeenten'' is also now located in Rokkeveen-Oost. | |||
Rokkeveen-West (postcode 2719) mainly encompasses newer development on the grounds of the former Floriade-park, which includes both residential and office buildings. | |||
=== Oosterheem (1999) <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.zoetermeer.nl/oosterheem | title=Oosterheem | publisher=Gemeente Zoetermeer | access-date=28 November 2023}}</ref>=== | |||
Oosterheem is the newest district of Zoetermeer, a ] and the source of Zoetermeer's most recent and continuing growth, which allowed it to become the third most populous municipality in South Holland. The districts development was not without problematic issues and delays, stemming first from the concerns over the environmental impacts of such development, and later from the planning and construction of ], which now forms the district's and municipality's eastern border. An enduring concern is an old pipeline, now used for the transportation of pressurized CO<sub>2</sub>, which runs through Oosterheem. | |||
Oosterheem is served by three stations on RandstadRail line 4, whose tracks branch out from the original RandstadRail loop in Seghwaert. It is further divided into Oosterheem-Oost (postcode 2721) and Oosterheem-West (postcode 2729). | |||
=== Wijkposten === | |||
Zoetermeer has a network of "''wijkposten''" ("neighbourhood stations"), which provide more direct contacts between the municipality and the inhabitants of the neighbourhoods. The ''wijkposten'' employ personnel to deal with housing issues and provide space for local police officers. There are six ''wijkposten'' throughout Zoetermeer. Buytenwegh de Leyens, Meerzicht, Oosterheem and Rokkeveen have a ''wijkpost'' each, while Noordhove and Seghwaert share a common station and ''Wijkpost Center'' serves Dorp, Driemanspolder, Palenstein and Stadscentrum, which are for some purposes also lumped together as "Zoetermeer Centrum".<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120717012130/http://www.zoetermeer.nl/over-zoetermeer/wijkposten_3821/ |date=July 17, 2012 }}, on www.zoetermeer.nl (official webpage of the municipality of Zoetermeer) {{in lang|nl}}</ref> | |||
=== Other Former Neighbourhoods === | |||
==== Dorp (1962) ==== | |||
Literally meaning "village", this ''wijk'' covers mostly the territory of the pre-existing village of Zoetermeer, with the central ''Dorpstraat'' (village street) with historic buildings serving as a shopping and recreation area. The area also features the historic ''De Hoop'' ], which unlike many other windmills in the area used for drainage, has always been used as a flourmill. The postcode for Zoetermeer-Dorp is 2712. | |||
==== Driemanspolder (1965) ==== | |||
Driemanspolder (postcode 2713) was the first area to be developed as part of modern Zoetermeer, and contains mostly large multi-apartment buildings characteristic of the era. It is next to the A12 motorway, which forms the southern border of the ''wijk'', and directly north of the ] (which is on the other side of A12). | |||
==== Palenstein (1966) ==== | |||
Palenstein (postcode 2722) is north of the Dorp, deriving its name from the former Castle of Palenstein, which used to be there. It mainly consists of highrise residential development. A rejuvenation project was started in Palenstein in 2006, providing for the renovation of some and demolition of other older buildings. | |||
==== Seghwaert (1975) ==== | |||
] was formed around what was the former village of ] (or Zegwaard), which fused with Zoetermeer in 1935, using the archaic spelling of the locale's name. The old Zegwaart was a ] along what remains until today as ''Zegwaartseweg'', which is perpendicular to ''Dorpstraat''. It is further divided into Seghwaert-Oost (postcode 2723), -Midden (postcode 2724) and -Noord (postcode 2727). | |||
==Economy== | ==Economy== | ||
] at Siemens factory in Zoetermeer]] | |||
Zoetermeer is a so called ]-city which means Zoetermeer has a modern infrastructure and a lot of schools that offer ICT-related education. Also 20% of the population of Zoetermeer already has an ICT-related job. ] and ] also have factories in Zoetermeer. The municipality of Zoetermeer designates a comparatively large part of the budget to computers for schools. | |||
Zoetermeer's economy is primarily dependent and revolving around ]. With modern infrastructure, a highly digitised centre called 'het Forum' that houses city hall, the central library and numerous other organisations, and many schools that offer IT-related education, it also is a major software development centre, with many software developers based here. There are a large number of IT companies with branches in Zoetermeer, like ], which has its Dutch Tech Campus in Zoetermeer, and ] Medical Systems Europe BV. 20% of the population of Zoetermeer has an IT-related job. The local government designates a comparatively large part of the budget to computers for schools. | |||
To stress the |
To stress the IT tradition of Zoetermeer, the city is the first in the world to have a city hall in ]. | ||
== |
==Transport== | ||
A ] system is reconstructed recently. The former urban ] called ] was rebuilt for that purpose. The stadslijn was the only urban ] in The Netherlands and was comparable to the ] in ] or ] in ]. It had 12 stations in Zoetermeer and runs to and from ] ]. | |||
===Light rail=== | |||
The new ] system is part of the ] project between ], ] and Zoetermeer. Besides the rebuild ], which now has 13 stations, a new line has been constructed called the Oosterheemlijn. This new line leads to a new part of town called ], with 30.000 inhabitants when finished the largest quarter of Zoetermeer. The ] now has three stations, but will be extended to Rotterdam in the future. The RandstadRail has been postponed due to several derailment incidents. | |||
The former ] ] was rebuilt as light rail in 2006/2007. The stadslijn was the only urban railway in The Netherlands. It had 12 stations in Zoetermeer and ran to and from ] ]. | |||
The new ] system is part of the ] network between ], ] and Zoetermeer. Besides the rebuilt original Stadslijn, which now has 13 stations, the added Oosterheemlijn leads to the new suburb Oosterheem. The Oosterheemlijn has five stations and ends at the heavy rail ]. | |||
===Heavy rail=== | |||
The ], as the Dutch ] ] highspeed railway line from ] to ] is called, also runs through Zoetermeer, but does not stop there yet. In the future a new station might be built where RandstadRail, the main railway between ] and ] and the ] meet{{Fact|date=July 2007}}. | |||
Zoetermeer has three stations on the main railway between The Hague and Utrecht. Zoetermeer-Zegwaard, built when the city was connected by railway in 1868, burnt down in 1906. Later the station reopened 1965 on the same location as ]. The main station, ], was opened in 1973. Lastly, the newest station, ], was completed in May 2019. | |||
The ] high speed line from ] to ] passes Zoetermeer on its eastern side. Although there have been proposals to open a station on the line, this seems highly unlikely this will be realized.<ref>, on www.stationsweb.nl {{in lang|nl}}</ref> | |||
Zoetermeer is built next to the A12 highway between The Hague and Utrecht. | |||
===Motorway=== | |||
Zoetermeer is next to the ], connecting The Hague with ], ] and ]. | |||
==Religion== | ==Religion== | ||
Zoetermeer is the only |
Zoetermeer is the only place in the Netherlands with a ] of ]. It is situated near the old village centre.<ref></ref><ref>]</ref> | ||
==Entertainment and recreation== | ==Entertainment and recreation== | ||
This former ] used to |
This former ] used to be a satellite city of ], as many residents worked, shopped and were entertained in The Hague. With the growth of Zoetermeer came a large theatre, mega cinema, and other entertainment such as ], laser gaming, survival centre, and a golf centre. | ||
===Museums=== | |||
The city has two museums, Museum deVoorde and the National Videogame Museum. In 2022, subsidy for Museum deVoorde was stopped by the local government because of low visitor numbers after the COVID19-pandemic. | |||
===SnowWorld=== | ===SnowWorld=== | ||
] | ] | ||
] was the first ] made of real snow in Europe, |
] was the first ] made of real snow in Europe, opened in 1996. It now has three slopes, of which the {{convert|200|m|adj=on|abbr=off}} slope is the longest. Plans are being made to extend this to {{convert|300|m|abbr=off}}. Open since December 2016, SnowWorld attracts over a million visitors each year, making it the most important tourist attraction in Zoetermeer. | ||
===Dutch Water Dreams=== | ===Dutch Water Dreams=== | ||
] (DWD) |
] (DWD) was an artificial Olympic ] ] circuit. It was a copy of the one built in ] for the 2008 ] and was mainly used for training by ]an ] teams, and also for ] and recreation. DWD also had an indoor Flowrider centre. Dutch Water Dreams closed in 2015.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.omroepwest.nl/nieuws/2953274/Curator-Dutch-Water-Dreams-is-hoopvol-koper-gezocht-voor-failliet-bedrijf|title=Curator Dutch Water Dreams is hoopvol; koper gezocht voor failliet bedrijf|website=Omroep West|language=nl|access-date=2019-02-27}}</ref> | ||
===Silverdome=== | ===Silverdome=== | ||
] is an indoor Olympic ice skating track and convention centre. It |
] is an indoor Olympic ice skating track and convention centre. It is used as a training centre for the ], the Dutch Olympic and world championship ice skaters. It is also home to the only curling rink in the Netherlands. Outside the skating season it is used as a convention centre and concert hall and for large ]s. | ||
===Indoor Dive=== | |||
There are plans to build an indoor diving centre in Zoetermeer. With 70 m in diameter and 30 m deep, it will be the largest indoor diving centre in the world. There will be a coral reef and under water caves and a large beach around the edge. 10000 life tropical fish should make it as realistic as possible. | |||
===Parks=== | ===Parks=== | ||
Zoetermeer has |
Zoetermeer has many parks, the biggest being the "Westerpark" on the west side of town. It is almost as large as Central Park in New York. Other notable parks are the "Buytenpark", the "Aldo van Eyckpark", the "Binnenpark", the "Van Tuyllpark (with Dutch Water Dreams and Aquapark Keerpunt), the "Hoekstrapark", the "Wilhelminapark", the "]", the "Seghwaertse Hout" and the "Seghwaertpark". | ||
At the north side there is a lake, the "Zoetermeerse Plas", often |
At the north side there is a lake, the "Zoetermeerse Plas", often called "Noord Aa" because it is in the Noord Aa Recreational Area. There is a beach along one side of the lake and a marina on the other. Wind- and ], sailing and fishing are the most popular activities on the lake. | ||
On both the west and east side of the city |
On both the west and east side of the city forests are being planted, called "]" (west side) and ] (east side). These forests are intended to form a "natural" barrier between The Hague and Zoetermeer. | ||
<!-- | |||
===Virtual Zoetermeer=== | ===Virtual Zoetermeer=== | ||
Virtual Zoetermeer is a game made by the municipality of Zoetermeer. It lets you rebuild the city of Zoetermeer. It kind of looks like SimCity and is in ]. |
Virtual Zoetermeer is a game made by the municipality of Zoetermeer. It lets you rebuild the city of Zoetermeer. It kind of looks like SimCity and is in ]. The game can be downloaded . | ||
There used to be a castle in Zoetermeer, called ]. You can experience the life in the castle in game. | There used to be a castle in Zoetermeer, called ]. You can experience the life in the castle in game. | ||
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==International relations== | |||
==Sister cities and twin towns== | |||
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in the Netherlands}} | |||
* {{flagicon|Slovakia}} ], ] | |||
* {{flagicon|Nicaragua}} ], ] | |||
===Twin towns – Sister cities=== | |||
==Image gallery== | |||
Zoetermeer is ] with: | |||
<gallery> | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
Image:Zoetermeer 1868.png|Zoetermeer in 1868. | |||
|- valign="top" | |||
Image:Watertoren Zoetermeer.jpg|Former Water tower | |||
| | |||
Image:Tempelzoetermeer.jpg|Mormon Temple | |||
* {{flagicon|GER}} ], ] | |||
Image:Zoetermeer Caribbean Carnival drummers 2.jpg|Zoetermeer Caribbean Festival]] | |||
* {{flagicon|NCA}} ], ] | |||
</gallery> | |||
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* {{flagicon|SVK}} ], ] | |||
* {{flagicon|ROU}} ], ] | |||
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* {{flagicon|PRC}} ], ] | |||
|} | |||
== |
== Notable people == | ||
], 2024]] | |||
{{commonscat}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
=== Public thinking & public service === | |||
* ] (1870 in Zoetermeer - 1926), amateur physicist and lawyer | |||
* ] (born 1948), Dutch politician, lives in Zoetermeer | |||
* ] (born 1949 in Zoetermeer), ancient historian, specializing in the ] | |||
* ] (born 1950), Dutch politician, Mayor of Zoetermeer since 2012 | |||
* ] (born 1957), Dutch civil servant and politician, ] since 2024, lives in Zoetermeer | |||
* ] (born 1978 in Zoetermeer), Dutch engineer and politician, member of the ] | |||
* ] (born 1979 in Zoetermeer), furniture designer | |||
* ] (born 1989), Dutch politician | |||
=== The arts === | |||
* ] (born 1984 in Zoetermeer) stage name '']'', Dutch singer-songwriter, rapper, producer and actor | |||
* ] (born 1990 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch DJ, musician, record producer and composer | |||
* Shandro Jahangier (born 1992 in Zoetermeer) stage name '']'', a Dutch DJ and record producer | |||
* ] (born 1995 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch model <ref> retrieved 22 December 2019 </ref> | |||
=== Sport === | |||
* ] (1918–1998 in Zoetermeer) Dutch freestyle swimmer, gold medallist at the ] | |||
* ] (1922–2012 in Zoetermeer), Dutch track and field athlete, gold medallist at the ] | |||
* ] (born 1962 in Zoetermeer) a former artistic gymnast, competed at the ] | |||
* ] (born 1969), professional football manager and former player | |||
* ] (born 1984 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch former competitive figure skater | |||
* ] (born 1986 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch gymnast, competed at the ] and ] | |||
* ] (born 1989 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch footballer, over 185 club caps | |||
* ] (born 1990 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch footballer, over 300 club caps | |||
* ] (born 1990 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch short track speed skater, silver medallist at the ] | |||
* ] (born 1991 in Zoetermeer) is a Curaçaoan footballer with over 150 club caps | |||
== Panorama == | |||
] | |||
== References == | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
== External links== | |||
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{{wikivoyage|Zoetermeer}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 01:34, 31 December 2024
City and municipality in South Holland, NetherlandsZoetermeer | |
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City and municipality | |
Buildings in Zoetermeer | |
FlagCoat of arms | |
Location in South Holland | |
ZoetermeerLocation within the NetherlandsShow map of NetherlandsZoetermeerLocation within EuropeShow map of Europe | |
Coordinates: 52°4′N 4°30′E / 52.067°N 4.500°E / 52.067; 4.500 | |
Country | Netherlands |
Province | South Holland |
Government | |
• Body | Municipal council |
• Mayor | Michel Bezuijen (VVD) |
Area | |
• Total | 37.05 km (14.31 sq mi) |
• Land | 34.45 km (13.30 sq mi) |
• Water | 2.60 km (1.00 sq mi) |
Elevation | −3 m (−10 ft) |
Population | |
• Total | 125,267 |
• Density | 3,636/km (9,420/sq mi) |
Demonym | Zoetermeerder |
Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) |
Postcode | 2700–2729 |
Area code | 079 |
Website | www |
Zoetermeer (Dutch pronunciation: [ˌzutərˈmeːr] ) is a city in the Western Netherlands, in the province of South Holland. The municipality covers an area of 37.05 km (14.31 sq mi) of which 2.60 km (1.00 sq mi) is water. A small village until the late 1960s, it had 6,392 inhabitants in 1950. By 2023 this had grown to 126.998, making it the fourth largest population centre in the province of South Holland, after Rotterdam, The Hague and Leiden. While now a city in its own right, Zoetermeer started out as a suburb of The Hague and is still a part of the Greater The Hague urban area.
The name Zoetermeer (Dutch for "freshwater lake") refers to the former lake north of the town (reclaimed in 1614). Because the name literally translates as "sweet lake" local residents have dubbed Zoetermeer "Sweet Lake City".
History
The Zoetermeer Archaeological Working Group has found some Roman shards, but they are so few that it is not clear whether Zoetermeer already existed in Roman times. Excavation did find older animal material. During the extraction of sand for the new housing estates, bones of mammoths, aurochs and saber-toothed tigers surfaced from great depths. Those animals walked around here ten to a hundred thousand years ago.
The village of Zoetermeer is more than a thousand years old. In the Middle Ages, farmers dug so-called valley holes. The clay from those holes was used to improve their peatland. At the bottom of one such hole, Zoetermeer archaeologists found a carved wooden pole a few years ago, dating back to the year 985.
Zoetermeer used to have to pay a certain tax, the botting, to the Count of Holland. It is known that only the oldest towns in this province paid that tax. This shows that Zoetermeer must have been founded at least before 1100. The first written evidence for the existence of a village on the site of present-day Zoetermeer is found in 1269. Count Floris V then gave away part of the tax revenue here as a dowry.
In the 13th century a village center was formed, which still exists as the historic Dorpsstraat. Until the 17th century there was a lake called the Zoetermeer. A reminder of this is the "Zoetermeerse Plas" in the Noord Aa recreation area at the northern edge of town; this artificial lake was created when tons of sand were needed to lay the foundation for new housing development, and the area north of Zoetermeer was a good source of this resource.
After the foundation of Zoetermeer, the settlement Zegwaart arose at the site of the present Zegwaartseweg. It was probably named after the sedge-covered worth, a low-lying area, where most people went to live. In the 13th century the settlement centers moved from Langeland and Zegwaartseweg to Dorpsstraat. In 1296 there was probably already a church on the site where the Oude Kerk now stands. Zoetermeer and Zegwaart remained independent, but formed one parish.
Zoetermeer developed more prosperously over the centuries than Zegwaart. That village suffered relatively often from fires and floods. On May 1, 1935, both municipalities were merged into the present municipality of Zoetermeer. Seghwaert, an older way of spelling of Zegwaard, is now the name of a neighbourhood outside the old village centre.
Zoetermeer began to grow slightly when the first train service came around 1868. A few decades later the Numico factory started near the station. The real growth started in 1966, when there was an urgent need of houses from people around The Hague. From then they started to build new quarters around the old village centre, so Zoetermeer began to grow and became a city in the meantime.
Although contemporary Zoetermeer has the image of a modern city, there are still remains of the past. Like the old village centre with its small houses and the church with late medieval 15th-century clock tower (on picture, wooden top from 1642), and the old farms, surrounded by modern houses nowadays.
Lake Dobbe divides the old town from the new city centre, with the medieval village centre on one side of the lake and the modern high-rise and skyscrapers on the other side.
Neighbourhoods
Zoetermeer is divided into 6 neighbourhoods (wijken), which cover most of the municipality's territory, with the remainder being the commercial area in the east and the mostly green and undeveloped Buitengebied in the west. Every neighbourhood has at least one (smaller) shopping mall and (except for Noordhove) a tram stop. Each neighbourhood consists of one or more wijken, each of which has a separate postcode with differing last two digits following "27", from within Zoetermeer's 2710-2729 assigned postcodes (2700, 2701 and 2702 are used for post-office boxes and the rest are not used as of 2012)
These neighbourhoods have the following names (in brackets the year the neighbourhood was designated, although some of the neighbourhood already existed before designation):
Meerzicht (1969)
Literally meaning "lake view", Meerzicht is divided by the RandstadRail light rail tracks into Meerzicht-Oost (postcode 2715), with taller block of flats, and Meerzicht-West (postcode 2716) with low-rise residential development. Further to the west is the water-rich, 280-hectare urban park and recreation area Westerpark.
Buytenwegh de Leyens (1974)
The development of this area marked the shift to the development of single-family homes with private gardens more popular with Dutch families of that and coming decades, and encompasses the much older settlements of Buytenwegh (postcode 2717) and De Leyens (postcode 2725), and an area called "Buytenwegh de Leyens" per se (postcode 2726).
Centrum (1978)
The construction of a new centre of Zoetermeer actually started only in 1981, to serve as a shopping and administrative heart of the city. It followed modern urban planning principles, placing parking garages, some storage facilities and a RandstadRail station on the ground level, which is covered by pedestrian- and bicycle-only area with shops on the lower floors and apartments above them, to ensure the centre does not die out outside of the business hours.
The centre was completed in phases, the last one being the Cadenza residential development in 2017. The Stadscentrum has two RandstadRail stations. The Centrum-West station is the terminus of RandstadRail line 3 and is the locations of Zoetermeer's busiest bus station. The Stadscentrum includes the modern town hall of Zoetermeer and the local police station. A small lake called Grote Dobbe is placed directly in between Stadscentrum and Dorp, with the promenades and bicycle paths along the lake connecting the old and the new centres of Zoetermeer. The postcode for Stadscentrum is 2711.
Noordhove & Seghwaert (1986)
Noordhove (postcode 2728) is located between Seghwaert to the south and the artificial lake known as 'Zoetermeerse Plas' to the north. Unlike the other wijken, it has no dedicated RandstadRail station, as both RandstadRail track branches run to the south of it.
Rokkeveen (1987)
Rokkeveen is separated from the other wijken by the A12 motorway and the Den Haag-Gouda railway line. As such, it enjoys direct access to Zoetermeer's railway stations and features numerous crossings under or over both transport corridors to allow access to the rest of Zoetermeer. Rokkeveen is further divided into Rokkeveen-Oost and Rokkeveen-West. A significant turning point in the development of this part of town was the Floriade 1992, which took place there.
Rokkeveen-Oost (postcode 2718) extends between the railway stations Zoetermeer-Oost and Zoetermeer. The Mandelabrug (Nelson Mandela bridge) was built over the latter for the Floriade (replacing an earlier smaller bridge, deemed insufficient for the increased traffic) as a covered bicycle and pedestrian passage over the railway, motorway and the RandstadRail, which adjoins it at this point from the North. The Mandelabrug connects the train station, the Randstadrail station Driemanspolder and the wijken of Rokkeveen-Oost and Driemanspolder. Next to the Mandelabrug runs a road crossing - a bridge between Afrikaweg on the northern side and Zuidweg in Rokkeveen.
The other crossing are the road, pedestrian and bicycle tunnels between Tweede and Eerste Stationsstraat next to Zoetermeer-Oost train station, connecting Rokkeveen-Oost with Dorp. The historic water tower De Tien Gemeenten is also now located in Rokkeveen-Oost.
Rokkeveen-West (postcode 2719) mainly encompasses newer development on the grounds of the former Floriade-park, which includes both residential and office buildings.
Oosterheem (1999)
Oosterheem is the newest district of Zoetermeer, a Vinex-location and the source of Zoetermeer's most recent and continuing growth, which allowed it to become the third most populous municipality in South Holland. The districts development was not without problematic issues and delays, stemming first from the concerns over the environmental impacts of such development, and later from the planning and construction of HSL-Zuid, which now forms the district's and municipality's eastern border. An enduring concern is an old pipeline, now used for the transportation of pressurized CO2, which runs through Oosterheem.
Oosterheem is served by three stations on RandstadRail line 4, whose tracks branch out from the original RandstadRail loop in Seghwaert. It is further divided into Oosterheem-Oost (postcode 2721) and Oosterheem-West (postcode 2729).
Wijkposten
Zoetermeer has a network of "wijkposten" ("neighbourhood stations"), which provide more direct contacts between the municipality and the inhabitants of the neighbourhoods. The wijkposten employ personnel to deal with housing issues and provide space for local police officers. There are six wijkposten throughout Zoetermeer. Buytenwegh de Leyens, Meerzicht, Oosterheem and Rokkeveen have a wijkpost each, while Noordhove and Seghwaert share a common station and Wijkpost Center serves Dorp, Driemanspolder, Palenstein and Stadscentrum, which are for some purposes also lumped together as "Zoetermeer Centrum".
Other Former Neighbourhoods
Dorp (1962)
Literally meaning "village", this wijk covers mostly the territory of the pre-existing village of Zoetermeer, with the central Dorpstraat (village street) with historic buildings serving as a shopping and recreation area. The area also features the historic De Hoop windmill, which unlike many other windmills in the area used for drainage, has always been used as a flourmill. The postcode for Zoetermeer-Dorp is 2712.
Driemanspolder (1965)
Driemanspolder (postcode 2713) was the first area to be developed as part of modern Zoetermeer, and contains mostly large multi-apartment buildings characteristic of the era. It is next to the A12 motorway, which forms the southern border of the wijk, and directly north of the Zoetermeer railway station (which is on the other side of A12).
Palenstein (1966)
Palenstein (postcode 2722) is north of the Dorp, deriving its name from the former Castle of Palenstein, which used to be there. It mainly consists of highrise residential development. A rejuvenation project was started in Palenstein in 2006, providing for the renovation of some and demolition of other older buildings.
Seghwaert (1975)
Seghwaert was formed around what was the former village of Zegwaart (or Zegwaard), which fused with Zoetermeer in 1935, using the archaic spelling of the locale's name. The old Zegwaart was a ribbon development along what remains until today as Zegwaartseweg, which is perpendicular to Dorpstraat. It is further divided into Seghwaert-Oost (postcode 2723), -Midden (postcode 2724) and -Noord (postcode 2727).
Economy
Zoetermeer's economy is primarily dependent and revolving around Information technology. With modern infrastructure, a highly digitised centre called 'het Forum' that houses city hall, the central library and numerous other organisations, and many schools that offer IT-related education, it also is a major software development centre, with many software developers based here. There are a large number of IT companies with branches in Zoetermeer, like Siemens, which has its Dutch Tech Campus in Zoetermeer, and Toshiba Medical Systems Europe BV. 20% of the population of Zoetermeer has an IT-related job. The local government designates a comparatively large part of the budget to computers for schools.
To stress the IT tradition of Zoetermeer, the city is the first in the world to have a city hall in Second Life.
Transport
Light rail
The former Zoetermeer Stadslijn urban railway was rebuilt as light rail in 2006/2007. The stadslijn was the only urban railway in The Netherlands. It had 12 stations in Zoetermeer and ran to and from The Hague Central Station.
The new light rail system is part of the RandstadRail network between The Hague, Rotterdam and Zoetermeer. Besides the rebuilt original Stadslijn, which now has 13 stations, the added Oosterheemlijn leads to the new suburb Oosterheem. The Oosterheemlijn has five stations and ends at the heavy rail Station Lansingerland-Zoetermeer.
Heavy rail
Zoetermeer has three stations on the main railway between The Hague and Utrecht. Zoetermeer-Zegwaard, built when the city was connected by railway in 1868, burnt down in 1906. Later the station reopened 1965 on the same location as Zoetermeer-Oost. The main station, Zoetermeer station, was opened in 1973. Lastly, the newest station, Station Lansingerland-Zoetermeer, was completed in May 2019.
The HSL-Zuid high speed line from Amsterdam to Paris passes Zoetermeer on its eastern side. Although there have been proposals to open a station on the line, this seems highly unlikely this will be realized.
Motorway
Zoetermeer is next to the A12 motorway, connecting The Hague with Utrecht, Arnhem and Germany.
Religion
Zoetermeer is the only place in the Netherlands with a temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It is situated near the old village centre.
Entertainment and recreation
This former new town used to be a satellite city of The Hague, as many residents worked, shopped and were entertained in The Hague. With the growth of Zoetermeer came a large theatre, mega cinema, and other entertainment such as go-karts, laser gaming, survival centre, and a golf centre.
Museums
The city has two museums, Museum deVoorde and the National Videogame Museum. In 2022, subsidy for Museum deVoorde was stopped by the local government because of low visitor numbers after the COVID19-pandemic.
SnowWorld
SnowWorld was the first indoor ski slope made of real snow in Europe, opened in 1996. It now has three slopes, of which the 200-metre (660-foot) slope is the longest. Plans are being made to extend this to 300 metres (980 feet). Open since December 2016, SnowWorld attracts over a million visitors each year, making it the most important tourist attraction in Zoetermeer.
Dutch Water Dreams
Dutch Water Dreams (DWD) was an artificial Olympic wild water rafting circuit. It was a copy of the one built in China for the 2008 Olympic Games and was mainly used for training by European rafting teams, and also for team building and recreation. DWD also had an indoor Flowrider centre. Dutch Water Dreams closed in 2015.
Silverdome
Silverdome is an indoor Olympic ice skating track and convention centre. It is used as a training centre for the KNSB, the Dutch Olympic and world championship ice skaters. It is also home to the only curling rink in the Netherlands. Outside the skating season it is used as a convention centre and concert hall and for large raves.
Parks
Zoetermeer has many parks, the biggest being the "Westerpark" on the west side of town. It is almost as large as Central Park in New York. Other notable parks are the "Buytenpark", the "Aldo van Eyckpark", the "Binnenpark", the "Van Tuyllpark (with Dutch Water Dreams and Aquapark Keerpunt), the "Hoekstrapark", the "Wilhelminapark", the "floriade park", the "Seghwaertse Hout" and the "Seghwaertpark".
At the north side there is a lake, the "Zoetermeerse Plas", often called "Noord Aa" because it is in the Noord Aa Recreational Area. There is a beach along one side of the lake and a marina on the other. Wind- and kite surfing, sailing and fishing are the most popular activities on the lake.
On both the west and east side of the city forests are being planted, called "Balijbos" (west side) and Bentwoud (east side). These forests are intended to form a "natural" barrier between The Hague and Zoetermeer.
International relations
See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in the NetherlandsTwin towns – Sister cities
Zoetermeer is twinned with:
Notable people
Public thinking & public service
- Antonius van den Broek (1870 in Zoetermeer - 1926), amateur physicist and lawyer
- Hilbrand Nawijn (born 1948), Dutch politician, lives in Zoetermeer
- Bert van der Spek (born 1949 in Zoetermeer), ancient historian, specializing in the Seleucid Empire
- Charlie Aptroot (born 1950), Dutch politician, Mayor of Zoetermeer since 2012
- Dick Schoof (born 1957), Dutch civil servant and politician, Prime Minister of the Netherlands since 2024, lives in Zoetermeer
- Martijn van Dam (born 1978 in Zoetermeer), Dutch engineer and politician, member of the Second Rutte cabinet
- Rutger de Regt (born 1979 in Zoetermeer), furniture designer
- Samira Rafaela (born 1989), Dutch politician
The arts
- Dennis Princewell Stehr (born 1984 in Zoetermeer) stage name Mr Probz, Dutch singer-songwriter, rapper, producer and actor
- San Holo (born 1990 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch DJ, musician, record producer and composer
- Shandro Jahangier (born 1992 in Zoetermeer) stage name Sandro Silva, a Dutch DJ and record producer
- Romee Strijd (born 1995 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch model
Sport
- Jopie Selbach (1918–1998 in Zoetermeer) Dutch freestyle swimmer, gold medallist at the 1936 Summer Olympics
- Xenia Stad-de Jong (1922–2012 in Zoetermeer), Dutch track and field athlete, gold medallist at the 1948 Summer Olympics
- Monique Bolleboom (born 1962 in Zoetermeer) a former artistic gymnast, competed at the 1976 Summer Olympics
- Patrick van Leeuwen (born 1969), professional football manager and former player
- Karen Venhuizen (born 1984 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch former competitive figure skater
- Suzanne Harmes (born 1986 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch gymnast, competed at the 2004 and 2008 Summer Olympics
- Remon van Bochoven (born 1989 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch footballer, over 185 club caps
- Leroy Fer (born 1990 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch footballer, over 300 club caps
- Yara van Kerkhof (born 1990 in Zoetermeer) a Dutch short track speed skater, silver medallist at the 2018 Winter Olympics
- Charlton Vicento (born 1991 in Zoetermeer) is a Curaçaoan footballer with over 150 club caps
Panorama
References
- "De leden van het college van B&W" [Members of the board of mayor and aldermen] (in Dutch). Gemeente Zoetermeer. Archived from the original on 24 August 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- "Kerncijfers wijken en buurten 2020" [Key figures for neighbourhoods 2020]. StatLine (in Dutch). CBS. 24 July 2020. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
- "Postcodetool for 2711EC". Actueel Hoogtebestand Nederland (in Dutch). Het Waterschapshuis. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- "Bevolkingsontwikkeling; regio per maand" [Population growth; regions per month]. CBS Statline (in Dutch). CBS. 1 January 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- "Nederland per gemeente 1950" Archived March 5, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, NIDI (Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute)
- "Top Ten Municipalities in South-Holland". AlleCijfers.nl. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
- "History of Zoetermeer". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
- "History of Zoetermeer". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
- "Wijken in Zoetermeer". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Wijken in Zoetermeer". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Meerzicht". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Buytenweg De Leyens". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Centrum". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Noordhoeve & Seghwaert". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Rokkeveen". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Oosterheem". Gemeente Zoetermeer. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
- "Wijkposten" Archived July 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, on www.zoetermeer.nl (official webpage of the municipality of Zoetermeer) (in Dutch)
- AD, 29-1-2007: "BleiZo nog niet in zicht", on www.stationsweb.nl (in Dutch)
- The Hague Netherlands LDS (Mormon) Temple
- The Den Haag-temple (Dutch Misplaced Pages)
- "Curator Dutch Water Dreams is hoopvol; koper gezocht voor failliet bedrijf". Omroep West (in Dutch). Retrieved 2019-02-27.
- IMDb Database retrieved 22 December 2019
External links
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