Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Limburgers walk through drained Juliana Canal amid major upgrade

Residents to walk on bottom of Juliana canal, 09/02/2025, The Netherlands.
Residents to walk on bottom of Juliana canal, 09/02/2025, The Netherlands. Copyright  EBU
Copyright EBU
By Euronews with EBU
Published on Updated
Share this article Comments
Share this article Close Button
Copy/paste the article video embed link below: Copy to clipboard Copied

In the Dutch province of Limburg, residents had the rare chance this weekend to walk on the bottom of the drained Juliana canal.

ADVERTISEMENT

It was a special day for 3,600 residents of Limburg as they set foot on the bottom of the Juliana Canal. For months, they had observed the large-scale construction work from a distance, but yesterday, they were given the rare opportunity to walk through the drained canal themselves.

Rijkswaterstaat, the executive agency of the Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management, is overseeing a major project to deepen and widen the Juliana Canal so that larger vessels can use it.

The canal, which has been in use for 90 years, is no longer suitable for modern shipping needs. The upgrades will allow passage for ships up to 190 metres in length, over 11 meters in width, and with a maximum draught of 3.5 metres.

To facilitate the work, engineers built a dam at Berg aan de Maas, enabling 1.9 billion litres of water to be gradually drained through the lock at Born. Over a four-kilometre stretch, the canal was left dry, creating an extraordinary landscape that visitors were eager to explore.

Tickets for the open day quickly sold out. Those who attended expressed awe at the scale of the project. "It's quite exciting and very impressive," one visitor noted. Another remarked on how the canal appeared much larger and deeper when viewed from the bottom rather than from a bridge.

For some, the visit carried a personal significance. One man shared that his father had helped construct the canal decades ago, making the experience of walking through it particularly special. "The fact that I can walk through it myself after so many years is very meaningful," he said.

Despite some hoping to come across historical treasures, the drained canal yielded few surprises. "We found nothing of real value," explained Suzanne Maas of Rijkswaterstaat. "Just an old car, lots of discarded bicycles, and even a safe that had already been broken into."

As the project progresses, excitement builds for its completion this spring, when ships will once again navigate the upgraded waterway. Some visitors are already looking ahead to the moment when the water returns.

"You have to experience this once," one man said. "And I also want to see the water come back — but that won't be until April."

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share this article Comments

Read more

Remarkably rare Roman-British hoard of 404 coins discovered in the Netherlands

Sales of no or low alcohol beers rise in The Netherlands

Several arrested as climate activists block major highway in The Hague