Valreep

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Valreep
Op de Valreep
Valreep logo.png
Valreep
General information
StatusRedeveloped
AddressPolderweg 620
Town or cityAmsterdam
CountryNetherlands
Coordinates 52°21′27″N4°56′09″E / 52.3576°N 4.9357°E / 52.3576; 4.9357
Website
valreep.org

Op de Valreep was a squatted building in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Occupied in 2011, the former animal shelter was converted into a self-managed social centre. The squatters resisted eviction with creative actions, such as pretending the council had given them ownership and making spoof election materials. They were forcibly removed in 2014; the building was later converted into a restaurant.

Contents

History

The building in Amsterdam-Oost, a former animal shelter, was squatted on 24 July 2011 by 100 activists. [1] The owner was Oostpoort, a consortium of developers which had demolished the other buildings in the area and left the Valreep because of its monumental status. It was derelict and completely disconnected from utilities, so the squatters restored it and began hosting activities such as concerts, films and yoga workshops. [1] They called the self-managed social centre Op de Valreep ("just in time"). A collective was established to run the volunteer project by meetings and workgroups. [1] Next to the building, the occupiers set up a neighbourhood garden. [2]

The squatters engaged in creative political theatre to generate support for the project. In 2012, they made a fake press release announcing that the local council was going to hand over ownership of the building to them and invited people from the local community to attend a ceremony, at which an actor impersonating local councillor Thijs Reuten of the PvdA (Dutch Labour Party) gave the squatters fake deeds; the council was forced to issue a denial. [3] Two years later, during the 2014 municipal elections, the Valreep collective produced fake election materials for each party which suggested the social centre was a favoured project. [4]

2014 development of the Oostpoort site near to the Valreep Shopping center Oostpoort is almost ready in 2014; after many constructions there appeared her shops and residential buildings; free photo Amsterdam by Fons Heijnsbroek, January 2014.tif
2014 development of the Oostpoort site near to the Valreep

The social centre was evicted in June 2014; [4] the building was later redeveloped into a restaurant. [4]

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">De Blauwe Aanslag</span> Demolished building in The Hague

De Blauwe Aanslag was a squat and self-managed social centre in the Dutch city of The Hague. The oldest part of the building was built in 1886. The large building formerly housed tax offices and was occupied in 1980. When the local council took over the ownership of the building, it was agreed to renovate it in three stages, with the squatters living there. However the plans changed and since 1995 the council decided to widen the roads next to the building; for this reason the squat needed to be demolished. After many efforts to block the demolition with lawsuits, the squatters were evicted by military police on 3 October 2003.

Eurodusnie Collective was an anarchist collective based in Leiden, the Netherlands. It was established in 1997, in opposition to a summit of the European Council at which the Treaty of Amsterdam was signed. A small school was squatted for the purpose of holding a 'counter summit' as a protest over the official EU summit. From that, a more permanent anarchist project evolved which was of national importance.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dutch squatting ban</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Squatting in the Netherlands</span> Occupation of unused land or derelict buildings in the Netherlands

Squatting in the Netherlands is the occupation of unused or derelict buildings or land without the permission of the owner. The modern squatters movement began in the 1960s in the Netherlands. By the 1980s, it had become a powerful anarchist social movement which regularly came into conflict with the state, particularly in Amsterdam with the Vondelstraat and coronation riots.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tabakspanden</span> Buildings in central Amsterdam, squatted until 2015 and now redeveloped

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">De Vloek</span> Former squatted social centre in the Netherlands

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Squatting in the Czech Republic</span> Occupation of unused land or derelict buildings in the Czech Republic

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Squatting in Slovenia is the occupation of derelict buildings or unused land without the permission of the owner. Housing was illegally built from the 1960s onwards and informal settlements have been set up by Romani people or poor immigrants. In the capital Ljubljana, there is the autonomous zone of Metelkova and the Rog self-managed social centre was evicted in early 2021.

The modern political squatting movement began in Hamburg, Germany, when Neue Große Bergstraße 226 was occupied in 1970. Squatters wanted to provide housing for themselves amongst other demands such as preventing buildings from being demolished and finding space for cultural activities. The Hafenstraße buildings were first occupied in 1981 and were finally legalized after a long political struggle in 1995. The still extant Rote Flora self-managed social centre was occupied in 1989. Squatting actions continue into the present; more recent attempts are quickly evicted, although the Gängeviertel buildings were squatted and legalized in the 2010s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wyers (squat)</span> Squatters house in Amsterdam

The Wyers squat was a self-managed social centre on Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal in central Amsterdam, the Netherlands, between 1981 and 1984. The buildings of the Wyers former wholesale textile company were converted by the squatters into a range of living and work spaces. When the Government of Amsterdam decided to demolish the complex to make way for a Holiday Inn hotel, a car parking garage and apartments, the squatters made alternative proposals. The eviction was announced for February 14 1984 and there were demonstrations in support of the squat around the country. On the day of eviction, 1,500 people stayed inside the building then left without conflict. The breeding place discourse of new cultural initiatives presented by the squatters was later adopted by the city council.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Kemman, Alex (2012). "The Valreep: Making the impossible possible". In Hickey, Amber (ed.). A Guidebook of alternative nows. Los Angeles: Journal of Aesthetics & Protest Press. pp. 175–185. ISBN   978-0-615-64972-6.
  2. Knapp, Ladina; Veen, Esther; Renting, Henk; Wiskerke, Johannes S. C.; Groot, Jeroen C. J. (July 2016). "Vulnerability Analysis of Urban Agriculture Projects: A Case Study of Community and Entrepreneurial Gardens in the Netherlands and Switzerland". Urban Agriculture & Regional Food Systems. 1 (1): 1–13. doi: 10.2134/urbanag2015.01.1410 . S2CID   53360528.
  3. "Kraakpand waar niemand woont [Squat where nobody lives]". Het Parool (in Dutch). 9 January 2012.
  4. 1 2 3 de Koning, Anouk; de Jong, Edwin (2017). "Shifting Solidarities in Volatile Times". Etnofoor. 29 (2): 11–22. ISSN   0921-5158. JSTOR   26296167. Archived from the original on 16 February 2023. Retrieved 16 February 2023.