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Mona Keijzer
Minister of Housing and Spatial Planning
Ministry of Housing and Spatial Planning
spatial planning
Ministry of Public Housing and Spatial Planning
Saturday, 27 September 2025 - 10:35

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Dutch government designates 127 sites for 1.65 million new homes by 2050

The Dutch cabinet has announced 127 locations nationwide for large-scale housing development, aiming to add hundreds of thousands of homes by 2050. Caretaker Housing and Spatial Planning Minister Mona Keijzer presented the plan Friday, calling it the largest development challenge in Dutch history.

Areas near major cities such as Amsterdam and Eindhoven must deliver at least 2,000 homes each by 2034. “Center cities” like Leeuwarden and Haarlem will add 1,000 homes per site, while smaller regional hubs will add 400 homes. Projects include Dronten-Zuid, Heerenveen-West, and the Heerlen station area.

Hengelo, Enschede, Apeldoorn, Helmond, and Alkmaar join 17 existing large-scale development regions, with each site requiring thousands of new homes and additional national support. The plan also allows small towns to add up to 100 homes each: “Daarnaast kan in heel Nederland een 'wijkje erbij’,” the plan states.

The government estimates 1.65 million new homes will be needed by 2050, alongside space for energy, infrastructure, and sports.

Housing industry group WoningBouwersNL welcomed the plan but called for swift action: “It is essential that sufficient planning capacity becomes available. This can only happen if the national government, regions, and market parties work together. We call on all parties to take the next steps quickly so that we can actually realize the plans,” said director Coen van Rooyen.

Business groups VNO-NCW and MKB-Nederland said the plan “offers perspective to accelerate spatial development and to create room for the economy” and praised its integrated approach to housing, work, and infrastructure.

Reporting by ANP

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