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De Deyselhof

Defunct restaurants in the NetherlandsLandsmeerMichelin Guide starred restaurants in the NetherlandsRestaurant stubsRestaurants in the Netherlands
Use British English from December 2014

De Deyselhof is a defunct restaurant in Landsmeer, Netherlands. It was a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin star in both 1974 and 1975. The restaurant burned down in the night of 2 and 3 August 1976 and was never rebuilt.Owner of the restaurant was John de Boer, who was also the head chef in the restaurant's first three years of operation. He later appointed another head chef, who earned the Michelin star.De Deyselhof was a member of the Alliance Gastronomique Néerlandaise at least from 1971 to 1975.On the former location of the restaurant is now the estate Deijsselhof.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article De Deyselhof (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

De Deyselhof
Deijsselhof,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.426736111111 ° E 4.9120638888889 °
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Deijsselhof 2
1121 PA (Landsmeer)
North Holland, Netherlands
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Randstad
Randstad

The Randstad (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈrɑntstɑt] (listen); "Rim" or "Edge" City) is a roughly crescent-shaped conurbation in the central-western Netherlands, consisting primarily of the four largest Dutch cities (Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht); their suburbs, and many towns in between, that all grew and merged into each other, containing almost half the country's population. Among other things, it includes the Port of Rotterdam (the busiest seaport outside of Asia), the Port of Amsterdam (Europe's fourth-busiest seaport), and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (the busiest airport in Europe by aircraft movements). With a population of approximately 8.4 million people it is one of the largest metropolitan regions in Europe,[b] comparable in population size to the Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region or the San Francisco Bay Area, and covers an area of approximately 11,372 km2 (4,391 sq mi).[a] The Randstad had a gross regional product of €397 billion in 2017, making it the third most productive region in the European Union, behind the Paris Region and the Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region. It encompasses both the Amsterdam metropolitan area and Rotterdam–The Hague metropolitan area. It is part of the larger Blue Banana megalopolis. The Randstad's main cities are Almere, Amsterdam, Delft, Dordrecht, Haarlem, The Hague, Leiden, Rotterdam, Utrecht, and Zoetermeer. Other towns include Alkmaar, Alphen aan den Rijn, Amstelveen, Capelle aan den IJssel, Gouda, Heerhugowaard, Hilversum, Hoofddorp, Hoorn, Lelystad, Nieuwegein, Purmerend, Rijswijk, Schiedam, Spijkenisse, Veenendaal, Vlaardingen, Zaandam and Zeist. Although the name Randstad is often translated into English as "edge city" or "border city", a more accurate translation would be "rim city". The Dutch name was coined in 1938 by KLM founder Albert Plesman who, while flying over the region, used it to describe a strip of cities at the rim of a large green agricultural area (the Green Heart). While technically more of a crescent (the southeastern edge of the rim is significantly less populated), the ring shape formed by connecting the four major cities of the region led to the use of the name "Ring City".