The Narrowest Houses in Amsterdam

Interior of Amsterdam's Smallest House

Amsterdam houses tend to be quite narrow. But sometimes this narrowness is taken to extremes! Which is the narrowest depends on how you define narrow. Do you take into account only the width of the facade? Does it matter if the house widens away from the street. I think so.

Singel 7

Singel 7 is sometimes touted as the city’s narrowest house. But this is not really true as this house expands to a regular 3 window width at the other end on the alley behind. However, the doorway at Singel 7 is certainly narrow at 1.05 metres in width. This is said to be an early example of creative tax avoidance as houses were allegedly taxed on how much canal frontage they had. 

One of Amsterdam's Narrowest Houses

Singel 166

Another very narrow, 1.8 metres on the street side but it is 16 metres deep, expanding to a spacious 5 metres at the back of the house. It has a cute little cornice gable and red and yellow roses creating an archway over the front door.  The house is in private ownership so it’s not possible to see inside unfortunately. Originally there was an alley where the house is that ran between two potters’ workshops. The house has been there since 1634 and in the 1700s was knows as The long narrow way between the whitewood worker and the butcher’s”.

One of Amsterdam's Narrowest Houses

Kloveniersbuegwal 26

Kloveniersburgwal 26 is home to another narrow house, this one is 2.44 metres wide and expands at the rear behind a neighbouring property to about 6 metres wide, so clearly not in the running for the narrowest house title.

There is an urban legend about this house that it was built as a joke for the doorman of the wealthy Trip family opposite. Allegedly one of the Trip brothers heard the doorman exclaim that he would be happy with a house as wide as the Trip family’s front door and that is what he got. The Trip brothers were both long deceased when the narrow house was built so this story is widely doubted.

This is the most ornate of the small houses, with a very fancy gable adorned with two very well muscled female sphinxes. The current use of this building is certainly the most interesting of the buildings mentioned here as it is a shop selling kinky / fetish clothing. The window display sports a glittering array of dizzyingly  high heels, the favoured footwear of many of the sex workers in the red light district just around the corner.

One of Amsterdam's narrowest houses
INterior of the lingerie shop in one of Amsterdam's Narrowest houses
The gable of one of Amsterdam's narrowest houses at Kloveniersburgwal 26

Oude Hoogstraat 22

Narrowest house, probably not but this one is officially the smallest house in Amsterdam, that’s according to the city and I’m happy to go with that. It’s about 2 metres by 5 metres and had 3 floors of that tiny footprint. It was originally built as a single storey shoi in 1738 and then extended upwards in the late 1700s. It  has been a clock shop, a cigar shop a jewellers and, most recently a tea shop. It is actually where I buy all my tea from as they have the widest selection of tea in Amsterdam, sold by weight and lovely blends and infusions. It goes by its Dutch name of Het Kleinste Huis and you can buy their tea onine as well as in the shop.

 

Interior of Amsterdam's Smallest House

On my Private Amsterdam Walking Tour I usually go by 3 of these houses and can certainly plan a route to do that if you want a closer look while learning about Amsterdam.