Utrecht (province)

Utrecht is a central province of the Netherlands. With its 1359 square kilometers it's the smallest province in the country - it is, however, densely populated. The province consists mostly of municipalities forming the historically and presently important cities of Utrecht and Amersfoort and their urban areas, although it contains its share of green open landscapes in its part of the Groene Hart. Considered a part of the Randstad, it has convenient and fast links with major cities of South and North Holland, as well as other Dutch provinces, thanks to its central location.

Cities

 * — the historic university town known for its canals, student life and left-wing politics
 * — the second-largest city in the province, with a large medieval town center
 * — Fortresses of the famous Holland Water Line
 * - Home of the Ouwehands Dierenpark zoo and the Grebbeberg Military War Cemetery.
 * — famous for its witch's stool, where they issue certificates proving people aren't witches
 * — with a history spanning a millennium, it now serves as a commuter town for Amersfoort
 * — quite a large town but mostly residential
 * — the world's only drive-through windmill and some castles
 * — commuter town with a modern commercial cheese market

Other destinations

 * — mixed forests and moorlands on a hill ridge
 * — castles, estates, buitenplaatsen, gardens, tea houses and other remnants from the Dutch Golden Age

Understand
Utrecht was originally a bishopric that was often at war with its neighbors Gelderland, Holland (now the provinces of North-Holland and South-Holland) and Brabant (now North-Brabant and Flemish Brabant). It was one of the provinces in the Union of Utrecht that declared themselves independent of Spain in 1579, thus starting what would eventually become the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Get in
Since Utrecht is located in the center of the country, it is relatively easy to reach from anywhere in the Netherlands. There is no major airport, but there is a regular direct train between the city of Utrecht, which is the central railway hub of the country, and Schiphol Airport near Amsterdam.

Get around
Train travel on NS railways is usually more direct, frequent, and convenient where it is available, between towns and cities. Syntus Utrecht operates regional and rural bus routes, and, U-OV operates bus routes within the city as well as a few tram lines.

See
The most interesting part of the province Utrecht is the city with the same name.

Eat
In Spakenburg, a former fishing village in the north of the province lots of seafood can be eaten.

Go next

 * Groene Hart — an agricultural area in the heart of the Randstad
 * Vechtstreek — castles, estates, buitenplaatsen, gardens, tea houses and other remnants from the Dutch Golden Age