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La tarifa de su empresa no tiene disponibilidad para el período seleccionado.

¿Preguntas? Envíe un correo electrónico a reservations@volkshotel.nl o llame al +31 20 2612100.

La tarifa de su empresa no tiene disponibilidad para el período seleccionado.

¿Preguntas? Envíe un correo electrónico a reservations@volkshotel.nl o llame al +31 20 2612100.

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Oh oh ... Parece que el código de promoción no está activo para las fechas seleccionadas. Seleccione las fechas que están resaltadas.

Oh oh ... Parece que el código de promoción no está activo para las fechas seleccionadas. Seleccione las fechas que están resaltadas.

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Estadía mínima

Uno de los días de su selección requiere una estadía mínima de {nights} noches. Por favor, elija una estadía más larga.
Uno de los días de su selección requiere una estadía mínima de {nights} noches. Por favor, elija una estadía más larga.
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Por favor, haga una nueva selección

Desafortunadamente, no es posible reservar {date}. Por favor, seleccione una fecha nueva para su estadía.
Desafortunadamente, no es posible reservar {date}. Por favor, seleccione una fecha nueva para su estadía.
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Desafortunadamente, no hay suficientes camas disponibles para {date}. Por favor, haga una nueva selección.
Desafortunadamente, no hay suficientes camas disponibles para {date}. Por favor, haga una nueva selección.
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Cerrado para nuevas reservas

A veces mantenemos nuestro hotel cerrado para nuevas reservas y {date} es uno de estos días. Seleccione otro día para hacer su check in.
A veces mantenemos nuestro hotel cerrado para nuevas reservas y {date} es uno de estos días. Seleccione otro día para hacer su check in.
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No es posible seleccionar esta fecha para su check out. Por favor, seleccione otra fecha para su check out.
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Por favor, contáctenos.

Usted está intentando reserevar {nights} noches. Sin embargo, usted solamente dispone de {available} noches. Por favor, contáctenos.
Usted está intentando reserevar {nights} noches. Sin embargo, usted solamente dispone de {available} noches. Por favor, contáctenos.
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Company Login

The company bookings have been moved. Get in touch with your account manager or send a mail to business@volkshotel.nl.
The company bookings have been moved. Get in touch with your account manager or send a mail to business@volkshotel.nl.
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Questions? Mail reservations@volkshotel.nl reservations@volkshotel.nl or call +31 20 2612 100
Questions? Mail reservations@volkshotel.nl reservations@volkshotel.nl or call +31 20 2612 100
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We will be back in a sec.

You can make a reservation again by the end of the day.

Give us a call or email if you have any questions.

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✉️ reservations@volkshotel.nl

Sorry for the inconvenience!'
You can make a reservation again by the end of the day.

Give us a call or email if you have any questions.

📞 +31 (0)20 2612 100

✉️ reservations@volkshotel.nl

Sorry for the inconvenience!'
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i

General info

When to come & when to go
Your room will be ready at 16:00. Come whenever you like, your luggage is safe with us. Check out is at 12:00 midday, so have a sleep in.

Breakfast
We have two different options for the first meal of the day:
Quick breakfast:
For those with a busy schedule. Quick, simple, and to-go. Available at Werkplaats (ground floor).
Breakfast buffet: Take your time and enjoy the view at Canvas (7th floor). From 7.00–10.30 on weekdays and 8.00–11.30 on Saturdays and Sundays.
Pricing: €16 // €10 for kids up to 10 years old.

Parking
We have our own private outdoor car park, next to the hotel. We charge €25 per 24hrs for hotel guests. Other visitors pay €4 per hour or €35 for 24 hrs. Usually there’s enough space for everyone. We don’t take reservations. Non-hotel guests may park for a maximum of 48 hours, unless prior approval is obtained from management. After 48 hours, we reserve the right to have the vehicle towed.

Rates
Our rates include VAT and other taxes*. We like to keep things simple.
Limited Rate (pay now): This rate gives the best price for your room. You’ll pay the full amount when you make your booking. Refund is not possible. Modifying your booking to other stay dates is possible for €20 per night, until 24 hours before your day of arrival. For example: When your arrival day is Friday, you can modify your booking until Wednesday 11:59pm (Amsterdam Time).
Flex Rate (pay on arrival or pay now): This rate lets you modify or cancel your booking free of charge, until 24 hours before your day of arrival. For example: When your arrival day is Friday, you can modify or cancel your booking until Wednesday 11:59pm (Amsterdam Time).

*Government-imposed tax changes (VAT & city tax) will be charged upon arrival. Please note that these taxes apply at the check-in date, not at the moment of booking.

Bike rent
You can rent a Volkshotel bike for €14 on the first day & €10 on following days. We don’t take reservations.

Co-working space & Wi-Fi
Volkshotel’s Wi-Fi is fast and free of charge. We offer a free co-working space where Amsterdammers and hotel guests sit side by side. For private business meetings you can book a 4 to 8 person cabin for €45 or €65 per hour.

Pets
As long as it’s not the size of a giraffe, pets (max 2) are welcome to stay for an additional €20 fee per night. Email us at reservations@volkshotel.nl, so we are prepared.

Smoking
Use your room for relaxing, sleeping, cuddling, philosophizing, but not for smoking. If you smoke in your room or tamper with the smoke alarm we will charge you a €150 fee.

Drugs & Prostitution
Drugs (use, possession and selling of any kind) and prostitution are not tolerated in any part of Volkshotel.

Badplaats (Mini Spa)
Our rooftop hot tubs & sauna are open 7:00-23:00. No need to bring cash, only a bathing suit. Alcohol and glassware are not allowed.

Restaurant & Canvas Nights
On Friday and Saturday nights our restaurant Canvas can turn into a dance floor, if the mood is right. Entrance is free for these nights.

Doka
Doka has limited capacity, so we can’t guarantee you’ll get in.

Yoga
Everybody needs a bit of relaxation from time to time. Let your downward facing dog out. For schedules check out www.volkshotel.nl/agenda.

Haircut
Get your haircut on Fridays from 3:00-9:00pm in Werkplaats. Grab a beer, a burger and start your weekend with new hair!

Massage
Neck ache, back ache, headache, heartache, a massage fixes everything. Knead out the stress and pains. Send an email to massage@volkshotel.nl or drop by the reception. 

Extras
During your stay you might run into live music, exhibitions, cultural events and more. For up to date information, check out www.volkshotel.nl/agenda.

marzo 18, 2020

We Are Here

For the latest Volksnews edition we decided to work around the theme of drama. Besides several lighthearted and humorous topics, we couldn’t ignore the human drama that has been present in our own city for so many years. Therefore we visited We Are Here, a group of undocumented refugees in Amsterdam. The group came to be in 2012, and since then has moved from one self-claimed shelter to another, in various compositions and group-sizes.

It is all too easy to neglect the sorrow of other people that is hidden in plain sight, and in that, we are no different. Now we feel that it is time again to put a spotlight on where it hurts the most. We Are Here purposely acts as a union — using that, as well as their name — to highlight their presence and their constitutional right to be here as any other human being. They are here, and we cannot keep ignoring that.

After some back and forth messaging on Facebook I came in to contact with the coordinator of one of the groups that make up We Are Here, his name is Samba. He kindly invited me to come talk at their current shelter, for lack of a better word. Samba and his group are living and sleeping in what is essentially a refugee camp within an open parking garage. The whole place is surrounded by fences, clearly abandoned by society. Together with a photographer, we slipped through one of the fences making our way upwards inside the structure. On the second floor, we came across a blue wall of plastic sheeting, where we heard soft music and voices. We passed through the sheets, entering a pitch-black space filled with tents. We could barely see anything. Somewhere in the middle, people were sitting and talking around a tiny heater. It was Samba and some members of his group; Bob, Biggie, Kiara, Mohammed — to name a few. Samba told us that there were around fifty people living in this makeshift camp which had then only existed for a few weeks.

Together, we sat around the small heater as Bob, a young man in his early twenties, began talking. He told us he was originally from Gambia where he went to school and played football. Though he didn’t seem very interested in talking about his old life, I couldn’t blame him. He vividly told us about his disappointment toward a country that has rejected him in every imaginable way. He seemed pained by the fact that we dó take care of our cats and dogs, but weren’t at all interested as to whether he lived or died. The conditions Samba’s group were living in was clear evidence of this, the garage provided almost no shelter from the bitter cold nor the harsh wind; obviously there were no facilities such as toilets and showers. You could only conclude that this place is inhumane, and that this is our fault. Biggie, also from Gambia, told us he had been living as a construction worker in Libya due to unemployment issues in Gambia. When he had to flee Libya in the aftermath of Gaddafi’s downfall, everything was taken from him.

Samba explained to us that before refugees are put into boats which cross the Mediterranean Sea, smugglers would strip them of their money, phones and passports. Even if you did survive the journey, you’d enter Europe without any documentation nor any means of survival. The whole group was saddened by the way society perceived their presence in the Netherlands, branding them as criminals and intruders instead of human beings in desperate need. Whenever the We Are Here movement squats a new building, society, politicians, journalists and the authorities only seem interested in evicting them as soon as possible, neglecting the fact that these abandoned buildings are their only available shelter. All they want, is to be able to live a decent human life, and all they need is a society and political system that lets them. Nothing more. Biggie told us he and the others are full of energy, willing to work, if only they were allowed. Whenever possible, he would work in construction again. It was too dark, but I imagine he said it with a smile on his face.

Mohammed entered the conversation, taking us to a broader, more political and historical perspective. Their circumstances cannot be considered in isolation from the colonial past, where western countries took advantage of the African continent, he told us. That past has contributed greatly to their migration. Gambia has been a colonial toy between both French, Portuguese and British powers. Making us collectively — albeit unwillingly — complicit in their current situation. It requires for society to be more open than we are currently. Through solely focusing on the specifics of asylum procedures and upon our own fears, we lose sight of what is so fundamentally important. That these undocumented refugees are humans; desperately in need of dignity, humanity and a perspective for the future. Mohammed described their lives as being in both an invisible and a physical prison, with no way of moving forward or backward.

Towards the end, Samba took me further upstairs, showing me beds of people who didn’t have a tent. He became very emotional — angry even — after pointing out a sole mattress that was lying out in the open, without any form of protection. Samba has been living like this for the past seven years, it seemed unimaginable to me. Back home, in warmth, I looked at some of the extremely negative comments people left on their Facebook-page. It hurt, to think that if these people only visited the garage and spoke with Samba and the group — they might think a little differently.

Want to know more about We Are Here or make a donation? Check their website or Facebook profile.

Text by Fabian Hijlkema. Photos by Tom van Huisstede.

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