My Street Was Rebuilt

2024 ж. 14 Қаң.
150 308 Рет қаралды

My street got a makeover.
If you want to learn more about klinkers:
www.slimbestraten.nl/gebakken...
Please don't copy me OBF

Пікірлер
  • As a roadworker myself. I find it nice to see people have such intrest in what seems to be something very ordinary. Also i have to be picky as you made a mistake in the naming of the klinkers. As the Waalformaat is 5cm wide. infront the garages are the dikformaat (7cm wide) and the road is made of keiformaat or 10 duimers (10cm wide).

    @erik2811@erik28114 ай бұрын
    • I assume he asked the roadworkers, perhaps they got it wrong.

      @therealdutchidiot@therealdutchidiot4 ай бұрын
    • Als ik soms zie in wat voor omstandigheden jullie bezig zijn buiten.. petje af. Verbaast me altijd weer een beetje hoe van een schijnbare zandbak toch weer wat moois gemaakt wordt :)

      @Renzsu@Renzsu4 ай бұрын
    • damn. Will keep in mind for next time

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes4 ай бұрын
    • I find it helpful to remind myself that a lot of work may appear ordinary, but is in its own right very special. Makes you respect people their skills. I for one would be absolutely horrible at roadwork as I would have no idea about good practices. I'd probably take at least ten times as long to make something a hundred times worse!

      @roderickvannoorloos1967@roderickvannoorloos19674 ай бұрын
    • I was just about to say the same thing! But I work at a paver plant 😂 (The main rival of Van der Sanden 😂)

      @thomasvanwely@thomasvanwely4 ай бұрын
  • As a road constructor, this makes me proud. It's hard but honest work, and the experience you gain from the older people is worth more than what you read in the books.

    @mostlyneutral@mostlyneutral4 ай бұрын
    • With the removal of early retirement for jobs like this, I do worry about the sustainability of the literally back braking work of paving streets by hand.

      @matthijszeeman5351@matthijszeeman53514 ай бұрын
    • @@matthijszeeman5351 Yeah, it's a disgrace tbh.

      @mostlyneutral@mostlyneutral4 ай бұрын
    • @@matthijszeeman5351 There is a machine in use (Dutch) for laying klinkers with some width.(look it up)

      @user-zu2dg1re3d@user-zu2dg1re3d4 ай бұрын
    • @@matthijszeeman5351 well we're also one of the biggest innovators whilst using machines, most new roads that are being laid are with the bricklaying machine that slowly paves the entire road, ofc you still need to fill in and check manually afterwards but it saves the backs of our people. Atleast they get a siginificant pay here, construction workers will exist here forever especially if we need them because we can just up their pay and with the rising of the sea I expect an new deltawerken in the coming 10 years since most places of our country aren't fit for 2/3m rise over 60 years and with the current drought killing the roots in our dunes we have a lot of upgrading to do.

      @maartent9697@maartent96974 ай бұрын
    • @@matthijszeeman5351 kzhead.info/sun/nMyup5yMiZWtfXA/bejne.html

      @rykmat2542@rykmat25423 ай бұрын
  • Also a cool fact of the reason loads of dutch streets with a 30km/h speed limit use klinkers, is that you can hear the speed you're doing while driving. Asphalt gets quieter, and so do cars themselves, making people drive too fast too quickly when not looking at their speedo since one of the biggest senses of speed, sound, is taken away. Have you ever driven over 30km/h on a klinkered road? You'll definitely notice, so there is a safety benefit too :)

    @peetbroers5772@peetbroers57724 ай бұрын
    • That's an old architectural trick used to signal historical areas of z city. Use blocks instrad of asphalt. It decreases speed while approaching an area historically more walkable.

      @joaocosta3374@joaocosta33743 ай бұрын
    • North American road engineers wouldn't dare. Every road around here has to be 24 metres wide with the smooshest black top possible only to set the speed limit to 30... wonder why people speed...

      @SiNevesh@SiNevesh2 ай бұрын
  • 7:18 another very important upside of klinkers, and one of the main reasons a lot of dutch cities are switching back to em for road surfaces now, is that if you _do_ need to service some utilities along the way, it's a lot easier to rip up just a small bit of street and then repave it seamlessly. I recently moved to Germany, and I am shocked by the insanely patchworky asphalt here (although that is probably also partially due to the fact that they put the asphalt straight over the klinkers, allowing for cavities to form which can freeze)

    @biggie_tea@biggie_tea4 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for the information, I never thought about that!

      @amphibic_boi@amphibic_boi4 ай бұрын
    • IF you want patchwork roads, visit the UK :P

      @HesmiyuMC@HesmiyuMC4 ай бұрын
    • I’ve spent a lot of time in Germany and witnessed some work being done. In Munich they use a lot of pavers that are a little larger, but seeing the utility company pull them up, do work, and replace them with ease was amazing. The first time I witnessed it my mind exploded and I wonder why we use so much concrete and asphalt in the USA.

      @sonarun@sonarun4 ай бұрын
    • @@sonarun Yeah but it is very very regional

      @amphibic_boi@amphibic_boi4 ай бұрын
    • Another important reason is that drivers drive slower on them without thinking about it or watching the speedometer.

      @stan110@stan1104 ай бұрын
  • I'm always so impressed with the dutch ability to build with bricks like this. Here in north america we just seem to lack the skill base to do this properly and so many projects I see that try to make surfaces like this end up with serious deformation issues within a year or two. I guess it's mostly all about site prep.

    @baronjutter@baronjutter4 ай бұрын
    • Could also be because there's a larger amount of cars driving over the street.

      @dangboor4277@dangboor42774 ай бұрын
    • @@dangboor4277 And those cars are heavier and driving faster.

      @JaniceHope@JaniceHope4 ай бұрын
    • In The Netherlands they also deform slowly, but it’s not that bad. Cars have suspension and bikes don’t go that fast so bumpy paver roads aren’t as bad as bumpy asphalt roads.

      @miles5600@miles56004 ай бұрын
    • In some places they can also be laid from a drum. A big truck comes up, and lays down a entire mat that is 25-50 meters long. The bricks are laid and glued on a plastic mat in the factory, rolled up on the drum and just require the sides to be finished once laid. This only works for straight roads of specific widths and lengths, but it can make it go very fast, and the uniformity is very nice.

      @MarijnRoorda@MarijnRoorda4 ай бұрын
    • Brick roads are typically used for slow traffic residential roads and can get quite non flat. But that's only a plus connecting nicely to the speedbumbs there to calm traffic. A bigger deal i find that the sidewalk tiles in my neighborhood (the dutch typically use square, i guess 25 by 25cm or so, tiles for that) regularly deform or get loose and can sometimes create a tripping hazzard. But also that is an issue of not to big importance. Interestingly though in my city people are kind of responsible for the walkability of the sidewalk in front of their house and should inform the municipality about loose tiles which the municipality will fix free of charge.

      @bluband2@bluband24 ай бұрын
  • I had a chat with a city council traffic engineer here in The Hague and he mentioned that the permeable honeycomb pavers only really work if they're not parked on all the time. Grass tends to wilt if the parking space is occupied most of the time, which is why they're good for event/overflow/visitor parking, but not so good for residential use.

    @bertrambourdrez1251@bertrambourdrez12514 ай бұрын
    • yup, its better just to try to minimize pavement to begin with and then make the leftover space green.

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes4 ай бұрын
    • Similar paving can be used without grass. Plants are in general difficult to keep in good condition in such pavement. But even without the green, it's good for water retention. I have a driveway built like this, mostly because the ground is clay and it's difficult to get rid of all the water during heavy rain. It works great.

      @jankoodziej877@jankoodziej8774 ай бұрын
    • @@jankoodziej877 I expect that the primary function of the grass is to keep the sand together, in sandy areas, and keep it from becoming a pool of mud and eventually just pavers with holes.

      @crytocc@crytocc4 ай бұрын
    • As a traffic engineer myself i heard from a colleague of mine that we are currently about to use a new type of permeable surface on which grass will grow through it. Even if there are cars parked on it. Don't know if it will work but we already have a section under use so hopefully it will be a good usercase.

      @orphids4449@orphids44494 ай бұрын
    • @@crytocc no, not really, you don't need grass to do that, and you don't put sand in there, but gravel. For grass you need soil and you need to make sure it will have enough water. Another option for grass is a heavy plastic mesh, which is placed on gravel (same as paving) and filled with soil. But it has much more space for soil, so the end result looks almost like a regular lawn, yet it can support the weight of cars.

      @jankoodziej877@jankoodziej8774 ай бұрын
  • I grew up in a region in Germany that borders the Netherlands and it pains me that we can't seem to get it right while our neighbours are doing it splendidly just a couple minutes away. Everybody I know loves going to the Netherlands but nobody understands what makes it pleasant to be there

    @amphibic_boi@amphibic_boi4 ай бұрын
    • You can ask your local government to talk to their neighbours, we're always happy to help other countries build a road like a normal person would :P

      @TheSuperappelflap@TheSuperappelflap4 ай бұрын
    • It is not cheap.

      @jos_t_band3912@jos_t_band39124 ай бұрын
    • @@jos_t_band3912but it is cheaper in the long run

      @kkon5ti@kkon5ti3 ай бұрын
  • What's also nice about the gutters having a different color, is that the street seems narrower than it is, which motivates drivers to slow down, while they still have room to maneuvering when necessary.

    @george46light@george46light4 ай бұрын
  • When my (Dutch) street got redone, they used a road printer to lay down those “dikformaat klinkers”, this meant that the brick layers didn’t have to work on their knees, but could lay the keperverband standing up and by slowly moving the cart they were standing on, the bricks were laid down gently. Later in the day they’d use a “trilplaat” to secure the klinkers and to level the street.

    @MarceldeJong@MarceldeJong4 ай бұрын
    • I thought 'dikformaat' has to do with being sturdy enough to handle motorized traffic, in contrast to just for pedastrian use.

      @rienkhoek4169@rienkhoek41694 ай бұрын
    • working smarter, not harder

      @AJZulu@AJZulu3 ай бұрын
  • Frankly this sums up why I moved to the netherlands as well. The dutch ability to build extremely liveable and cosy living spaces will never cease to amaze me.

    @DesignFIaw@DesignFIaw4 ай бұрын
    • I mean, its out of necessity, we dont have any space left to waste. Every square centimeter has a designation. If we wasted space on inefficient living space for people, there would be less space for farming, for water, and for recreation. We dont have the luxury of having lots of abandoned buildings, unused plots of land, and widely spaced cities. Its not just something we do for fun.

      @TheSuperappelflap@TheSuperappelflap4 ай бұрын
  • Great video! But as a fellow Haarlemmer, I’d like to correct you on 1 minor mistake. The city coat of arms. There are not 5 stars on the emblem, but 4. The top element is the cross of Jeruzalem. Given to Haarlem by the patriarch of Jeruzalem during the crusades. The full and official coast of arms is as follows: The coat of arms of Haarlem consists of a red shield with a silver sword with golden handle under a white Jerusalem cross and flanked by 4 white six-pointed stars. Above the shield is the Imperial Crown of Austria under barren branches holding two Damiate bells, all held up by two golden lions standing on the motto of Haarlem. The motto of Haarlem is Vicit vim virtus (Latin for virtue conquered violence).

    @MLWitteman@MLWitteman4 ай бұрын
  • I have cycled past that street countless times while I lived in Haarlem before I moved away to Ede. Never knew I was so close to one of my favourite KZheadrs.

    @Joepser@Joepser4 ай бұрын
    • i never knew i was so close to one of my favorite subscribers

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes4 ай бұрын
  • Awesome. I remember when I first moved to Tha Hague, they changed multiple full width roads into bike only, giving the classic red klinkers. Was faacinating watching a very busy car road turn into something so relaxed and quiet.

    @silicalnz@silicalnz3 ай бұрын
    • At the moment Ive been watching a canal project by the central station. All sorts of very foreign machinary.

      @silicalnz@silicalnz3 ай бұрын
  • Her in Bergen (Norway), we have an interesting system in the city for all road works. What we have is something that have received the nick name "grave klubben" (Digging club). What this "digging club" does is coordinating between everyone that have something in the street (utility, internett, road, municipality, etc.). For example the local garbage company can come and inform the "digging club" that they want to install on of their Vacuum garbage system in that street and connect it to rest of it's grid. The Club inform all the other companies and municipality about this and ask if they also need something done. And they will all come together and do everything together. The idea is that the road only need to be open up once.

    @heuhen@heuhen3 ай бұрын
  • I engineer such streets for work, awesome to see that you’ve followed the construction process in such detail! I’m very proud of the level of detail and neat solutions that we apply here in the Netherlands ❤

    @konstantinasnavardauskas4495@konstantinasnavardauskas44954 ай бұрын
  • I recently moved to Liechtenstein, one of the smaller European countries. what's interesting about Liechtenstein is that within the last 2 years all the streets have been completely rebuilt to install district heating. No side street has been spared. At the same time, sidewalks were widened and trees were planted.

    @mxkrueger@mxkrueger3 ай бұрын
  • I swear Netherlands really is a little heaven here on Earth. Someday I must come to visit.

    @OdpadKreativity@OdpadKreativity2 ай бұрын
  • This is amazing! It's so cool to see how a road can look when it's actually been thought out and designed. Here in the UK every road just gets a fresh layer of badly installed tarmac when it becomes too damaged. Here the only thing that matters is doing the job as cheaply as possible (while probably still costing 20x what your road did). It's so cool to see how roads can look when they're designed and planned out for the better.

    @imkirbo3094@imkirbo30943 ай бұрын
  • Great video! I wish I had documented when the street I used to live in got redone. It was a massive upgrade! They literally raised the whole street (and adjacent streets) by about a meter, because that's how far the street had sunk relative to the houses. The street became smooth once again and they also introduced sidewalk level parking which I'm a big fan of.

    @MeatNinja@MeatNinja4 ай бұрын
    • Sooo, you live in Gouda (biggest example of this I'd ever seen with some house having 3 steps going up to the front door, which a few decades earlier had been ground level).

      @roderickvannoorloos1967@roderickvannoorloos19674 ай бұрын
    • When my street got repaved they created a bunch of new speedbumps that are really really steep to drive over, like uncomfortably so

      @logicguy4029@logicguy40294 ай бұрын
    • @@roderickvannoorloos1967 Not just Gouda, but that whole region. Everywhere were they lower the groundwater table in areas with peat soil; the peat degrades, oxidizes (releases a huge amount of CO2 too) and subsides. Then farmers with their ever bigger tractors complain their equipment sinks into the fields, their buddies at the water authority lower the ground water table... and repeat. There are 90 year old houses with original sewers while the 30 year old houses in peat-soil areas all had their sewer lines broken off where they enter the home. Because the home on piles doesn't sink... yet the soil around does.

      @jcvjcvjcvjcv@jcvjcvjcvjcv4 ай бұрын
    • I’m not a big fan of sidewalk level parking. My 30km/u street exits on a 50km/u street with this kind of parking with a cycle lane right beside it on street level. Even with just a few centimeters extra height the parked cars block the view of the upcoming cyclists (and cars) which can create dangerous situations. You can only see them coming when the nose of the car is on the cycle lane. When I cycle on that lane, I always have to be extra aware of cars exiting the side streets. One street over they’ve also raised the cycle lane which eliminates this visibility problem.

      @anouk6644@anouk66444 ай бұрын
    • Do you by any chance live at Sveadal in Schiedam? I'm a Civil Engineering student at the Hogeschool Rotterdam, and we had to do a project about that neighbourhood, which I for that reason visited about 1,5 years ago. It was crazy to see those streets being sunk by at least a meter at some parts.

      @DAANoontje@DAANoontje3 ай бұрын
  • Those bicycle parking racks are actually subpar. When you park your front wheel in them, it's very easy for the wheels to get bent. Most of the time dutch folks don't actually park their bicycle in the forks, but instead, next to them. It is also a lot harder to secure a chain lock onto them and on to the frame of the bicycle. It's easier to have U bent shaped ones, upside down, and park against those. It prevents them from falling over, makes locking easier, and you can often park up to 3 bicycles between them. However, not all municipalities have seen the light yet...

    @MarijnRoorda@MarijnRoorda4 ай бұрын
    • unfortunately tulip bike racks are standardized in city's HIOR.

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes4 ай бұрын
    • Fietsnietje aka nietje (staple bike rack)

      @yellfire@yellfireАй бұрын
  • I am a Civil Engineering student (3rd year now) and I've really enjoyed watching you being so enthusiastic about this topic. Did you btw know that the 'klinkers' are mostly on a 45* angle on the streets, to minimalize the shifting of them (since the friction of the cars will be equally distributed into both directions (45* right and 45* left)). That's also the reason why they use the 'keperverband', to basically lock the klinkers in place.

    @DAANoontje@DAANoontje3 ай бұрын
  • I'm proud you're so invested in Dutch infrastructure and add so much value to our well-being in the Netherlands. Thanks :)

    @theodorruthern8028@theodorruthern80284 ай бұрын
  • You forgot to mention that klinkers are less hot in the summer, instead of asphalt.

    @FrankDijkstra@FrankDijkstra4 ай бұрын
  • This is so fascinating! I just moved to the Netherlands from the west coast of the US as well, and it's so interesting how many roads and sidewalks here are brick, I had no idea the thought that went into it was so detailed!

    @Josukegaming@JosukegamingАй бұрын
  • The nice thing about the old waalformaat klinkers, because it is a baked product they last very long and hold their colors. The concrete klinkers become grey over time. It is possible that the baked klinkers can be several centuries old.

    @sanderjansen5187@sanderjansen51874 ай бұрын
  • My US small town redid the streets recently and I sure wish that they would have thought about resurfacing with beautiful pavers.

    @vivalaleta@vivalaleta3 ай бұрын
  • I love this style of road. hope to see it spread more in the us

    @Wraine8430@Wraine84303 ай бұрын
  • Awesome to see the transformation. Meanwhile in Japan, the rare brick street got asphalt every time a service company big. It is cut with a circular saw … yeah, they don’t even try to reuse anything.

    @DamaxThomas@DamaxThomas3 ай бұрын
  • This is very interesting to see! For someone who's studying sustainability science in the Netherlands but grew up in Germany, to me it is so surprising how Dutch street "repavings" are almost always actual updates, whereas in Germany this only happens in selected well-off municipalities or in municipalities with a lot of active citizen or aware politicians. Living in Heerlen, I noticed how this may be a reason for the Netherlands being way better at handling the post-industrial transitions. In Germany, former mining towns still look miserable in many cases, while Heerlen - I'd argue - has actually become a nice city. Maybe a future video could look into how the different approaches to city planning result in better transitions/transformations of formerly industrial cities or areas compared to Germany or the Rust Belt in the US.

    @lesand5484@lesand54844 ай бұрын
    • Germany is a unique case because of the reunification happening only roughly 30 years ago and development in the east still being behind to this day. Another difference Germany has compared to the Netherlands, which the USA also has, is lower population density and more space. You dont have to upgrade every road in every small town. Sure it would look nice but its not critical. Over here, if we have one bad road, that results directly in a lot more accidents because there is so much traffic even in small towns. And dont forget that the Netherlands for the most part has always been focused on trade, and agriculture, not on industry. Yes we had a few mines, but most of the industry historically was located in the southern Netherlands, now Belgium, and just across the border in the Ruhr. Thats where the coal mines were, and thats where the industry was built. Nowadays our biggest industrial area is in the harbor at Rotterdam where oil, gas and hydrogen are processed. There are still some chemical plants and manufacturing plants in the south, they were built there specifically when the mines were closed, to provide jobs in the area, and construction was heavily subsidized by the government. Billions of euros of tax payer money were put into in the 60s and 70s these projects, and the companies that now own these facilities such as DSM, VDL Nedcar and Chemelot, are still operational. Most of the time at least. Overall the transition to a service economy was much easier here because we never relied on heavy industry, which was the case in the US and Germany.

      @TheSuperappelflap@TheSuperappelflap4 ай бұрын
    • @@TheSuperappelflap Good points and I generally agree. I just briefly want to point out a few things: population density may be higher across the entire country, and that would explain why roads on the countryside would be neglected. However it does not explain why particularly dense areas in Germany (i.e. the Ruhr region up to Cologne) are still lacking behind in updating their street designs and assuring high quality upkeep. Additionally, you make a great point about the reunification in the 90s (there were actually 2 reunifications if you also consider the reunification with the Saarland which everyone always forgets about, even in Germany😅). However I would argue that it's exactly due to a rapid privatization of the East that so many things are still not up to speed there. Had the German government subsidized and invested heavily like the Dutch gov did in the 60s and 70s to update the region's industry and provide well-paid jobs, then the eastern states would already be on pace with the west. Living in Heerlen, it is hard to imagine that this place was once an industrial city like many places in the Ruhr region nowadays. But if you're in the Ruhrpott, you can immediately tell that it's still suffering from deindustrialization and that shows that the Dutch policy approach worked better in my opinion. In the end Heerlen is just a nicer place to live than most Ruhrpott cities.

      @lesand5484@lesand54844 ай бұрын
    • @@lesand5484 Ive been in the Ruhr area some times and the highways and cities are pretty good. Maybe the smaller towns arent. I would still chalk that up to the heavy reliance on industry for the region. Even Limburg in the Netherlands was never a highly industrialized region, it just had coal mines and the coal was sold te Belgium, France or Germany. There were a few steel mills and boatyards in the Netherlands, one car factory and one airplane manufactury, but that was about it. Nothing on the scale you Germans had right across the border.

      @TheSuperappelflap@TheSuperappelflap4 ай бұрын
  • I really love the video here. As someone from Central Texas who has never traveled to Europe, I'd certainly imagine that such projects would be a delight to watch come into fruition. My city's atitude around biking is changing for the better, though I certainly hope that the urbanism and street design in the video will be popularised here.

    @ericr.7311@ericr.73114 ай бұрын
  • short note: Klinker have a side effect of making alot more noice then asphalt making ppl sub-conciusly drive slower hence the amount of klinkers in residential areas is the primary choice (30-zones)

    @pahtriac@pahtriac4 ай бұрын
    • It's literally the meaning of the word "klinker". A rough translation is "sounder".

      @therealdutchidiot@therealdutchidiot4 ай бұрын
    • @@therealdutchidiot I'm fairly certain tho is that that name is from before cars were around. The name is because if you tap 2 together after they are baked, you can hear from the sound if they are good. If they don't make a sound, they weren't baked properly.

      @randomviewer3494@randomviewer34944 ай бұрын
    • ​@@therealdutchidiotits an onomatopoeia, its spelled like how it sounds! *klink klink klink*

      @Evitaschannel@Evitaschannel4 ай бұрын
    • And "klinker" also means "vowel"

      @dylanseroo@dylanseroo4 ай бұрын
    • @@dylanseroo Yup, because it makes just a single sound, like "a" "e" "o" "u"

      @therealdutchidiot@therealdutchidiot4 ай бұрын
  • I love seeing the day-to-day operations in depth like this, great video! Nice of the crew there to let you film so much.

    @SiNevesh@SiNevesh2 ай бұрын
  • I am impressed, I loved seeing the redesign and I live far away from Haarlem (but still in the Netherlands). It reminds me of how my gemeente expanded a bycle path on one side of a road and now it is a two lane path that is pleasant to share even with mopeds riding along. I love this video, the project in it and Dutch infrastructure overall.

    @andreimircea2254@andreimircea22543 ай бұрын
  • impressive build quality and I love how they take a friendlier approach to "townhall meetings" to engage community feedback. Happy Biking once more!

    @studio.leonardo@studio.leonardo4 ай бұрын
  • This looks amazing! I wish more countries would use klinkers for their streets... I was in Denmark, where some streets looked very similar to yours and it was so nice to just walk around, even in freezing temperatures

    @mcj1m_noonewillfindthis@mcj1m_noonewillfindthis4 ай бұрын
    • Added bonus: repairing the surface is as easy as taking out some bricks, redo the base layer and put the bricks back.

      @therealdutchidiot@therealdutchidiot4 ай бұрын
    • In Belgium we also use them

      @houseplant1016@houseplant10164 ай бұрын
    • Added bonus: they're a traffic calming measure as well. Because of the noise of the tires on these, it feels like you're going faster, and drivers slow down to compensate without even realizing it...

      @jasper265@jasper2654 ай бұрын
    • ​@@therealdutchidiot Which you need to do constantly because the street deforms faster than asfalted roads

      @elguido@elguido4 ай бұрын
    • In Poland we use something called "Kostka brukowa" for residential streets.

      @Gorg465@Gorg4654 ай бұрын
  • Honestly love your videos! It's nice to see people so interested in my field of work. And it's great that these type of videos can also spread that interest to others. I wanted to add a bit of a fun fact about water infiltration and klinkers. We do have certain types of betonstraatstenen that can be waterdoorlatend or waterpasserend. Waterdoorlatend means the bricks are porous enough to let water go through them. And waterpasserend means the bricks have little bumps on the sides which act like space holders, creating gaps between the stones to let the water pass inbetween the stones. Using these types of klinkers means we can greatly reduce the amount of rainwater drainage utilities and therefore maintenance costs, while also increasing the local infiltration of rainwater.

    @christapunt@christapunt4 ай бұрын
  • so much nicer to have klinkers, and old klinkers are also nicer than new ones! of course this is not good for high traffic road,but man is so pretty for residential areas!

    @lesto12321@lesto123213 ай бұрын
  • Ai! Missed opportunity in the final view very visible: those containers should probably have been replaced with underground versions.

    @AndreSomers@AndreSomers4 ай бұрын
  • So neat, organized and colourful. Subtle, but with some colours. I like it.

    @jdillon8360@jdillon83604 ай бұрын
  • It’s very interesting to see how the gutter system is done in a place that doesn’t get nearly as cold or gutter systems go down 4 to 8 feet. so it’s kind of interesting to see gutters put in kind of similar to tile line

    @blazingcurent2504@blazingcurent25043 ай бұрын
  • Just subbed after being referred by NotJustBikes

    @user-op8fg3ny3j@user-op8fg3ny3j3 ай бұрын
  • this looks so much better, so pretty

    @qwerty-vg9yf@qwerty-vg9yf4 ай бұрын
  • Gooda love the passion you have for this stuff

    @fallout-laurens4@fallout-laurens44 ай бұрын
  • Electric power line, water pipes, gas pipes, telephone internet tv cables, street drainage, and house drainage and roof rain cutters , so quite a underground stuff to take care about

    @benjamindejonge3624@benjamindejonge36243 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for pointing out something I've always taken for granted 😊 Just a shame that the street lights ended up in the middle of the sidewalk, but I guess that's a result of them not being straight up against a house, or the danger of slamming your car door against them when they're on the edge of the sidewalk. 🤔

    @Judith_Remkes@Judith_RemkesАй бұрын
  • Thank you for this beautiful video. Well done. 👍👍

    @lbergen001@lbergen0014 ай бұрын
  • so cool to see the process! it's golden !

    @Altis_play@Altis_play3 ай бұрын
  • That's a whole lotta effort, kudos to those workers!

    @eliseumds@eliseumds4 ай бұрын
  • thanks for being so impressed by my country

    @r3stl3ss@r3stl3ss4 ай бұрын
  • I LOVE the documentation of the entire build process. Thanks for the valuable insight and all the information you provided. And thanks for giving that construction worker cola for their hard work haha (and as thanks for permission)

    @derp3044@derp30444 ай бұрын
  • Really informative. I am learning a lot.

    @birgitberr5784@birgitberr57844 ай бұрын
  • A beautiful product. The street looks much better. It takes some time, but the result is there.

    @wagelink@wagelink4 ай бұрын
  • I was thinking of taking a bike ride to Haarlem today (I live in The Hague), but it was raining (and snowing) a little too much for my liking, so I might go tomorrow. It seems your street is right besides the Haarlem station, so I'll probably pass by to take a look, because why not. There was a lot of work done to an intersection around the corner from my street, and it was indeed quite interesting to be able to see them go through the steps of reconstructing an interchange, working around all the pipes and cables, rebuilding the tram tracks etc.

    @Julius-Ver@Julius-Ver4 ай бұрын
  • I’m Italian and I can’t imagine a country where stuff actually happens and works, it’s crazy 😂😂😂

    @cristianino5435@cristianino54353 ай бұрын
  • Well done! You live in a beautiful street in Haarlem❤

    @just9828@just98284 ай бұрын
  • I love to see this!

    @Marten_Zeug@Marten_Zeug2 ай бұрын
  • Cool that the meeting was on your street itself. And included snacks!

    @g0d5m15t4k3@g0d5m15t4k33 ай бұрын
  • Love to see a foreigner be in awe of something that seems so normal to us. Keep it up

    @boegadi@boegadi4 ай бұрын
  • Leuke video :) Never got this perpective before so it's a great view to see something that's normally so invisible and taken for granted. Also forgot to mention but the result is great!

    @lolololol7573@lolololol75734 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing!

    @eugenetswong@eugenetswong12 күн бұрын
  • Very interesting. Thank you.

    @CreachterZ@CreachterZ25 күн бұрын
  • beautiful bricklaying.

    @AJZulu@AJZulu3 ай бұрын
  • Hey fellow Haarlemmer that works in land use planning, i thoroughly enjoy your video's. Thanks!

    @rienkhoek4169@rienkhoek41694 ай бұрын
  • Another pro of using klinkers in the netherlands is that a big part of the country is swampland. If youre ever in amsterdam look if you can see the difference in elevation between the sidewalk and the road. Roads in the netherlands tend to sink over time. When using klinkers you can just take them out, dump some more sand and re use the klinkers again. Asphalt is way more complicated and very expensive so youll often see the aspalt roads sinking.

    @YassinePineapple@YassinePineapple4 ай бұрын
    • Exactly, you even see it used to patch or smooth out concrete sidewalks. If they used klinkers/bricks or pavers we could just do the sand method that Dutch do but in Canada and the USA.

      @pbilk@pbilk4 ай бұрын
  • Can we just pause and take in how friggi'n cute this street is! 😍

    @Caprifool@Caprifool4 ай бұрын
  • Fascinating video. I’ve never followed a full street redesign and construction from start to finish. I’m glad you supplied them with coca cola in exchange for filming their work. I’m sure they felt appreciated. They are doing great work.

    @sergeantmajor_gross@sergeantmajor_gross4 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting video!

    @ifroad33@ifroad334 ай бұрын
  • Oh lawd! " We didn't have tornaders here until we started puttin' in traffic circles"

    @TaterPS@TaterPS3 ай бұрын
  • Actually, Klinkers can be a permeable surface without the honeycomb pattern. It just depends on the spacing between Klinkers and the material used to fill the gaps. If small gaps and fine sand is used (like 0-1mm sorting), only little water will be able to seep through and most of it will go to the gutters. If a 5mm gap is used and this is filled with gravel 1-3mm, normal rain will just seep through and only very strong rain will go to the gutters. However, this is a less durable when heavy vehicle traffic like trucks are to be expected. It is fine for low volume car traffic like in driveways and many residential streets.

    @foobar9220@foobar92203 ай бұрын
  • Looks a lot neater than it was...😀

    @jooproos6559@jooproos65594 ай бұрын
  • I like it, think it will be even prettier in the summer when the green had a chance to grow

    @Shokkwavez@Shokkwavez4 ай бұрын
  • That looks really nice! The left footpath could be wider though, those street lights make it especially narrow.

    @PhoenixHen@PhoenixHen4 ай бұрын
    • Well there are 2 things need to be considered. It's a dead end street, so not much of pedestrians (beside residents). It's a style frequently used in older cities like Haarlem. Doesn't mean we don't know them, wide sidewalks are only used in busy areas or next to dangerous roads. Like the bus lane that 'Build the lanes' street is connected to.

      @GamezBeatz@GamezBeatz4 ай бұрын
    • It looks like it's quiet enough you can just walk or roll in the street instead, if you need a bit more room (e.g. to walk side by side), as the filmer himself did :) Thay's what people do in a lot of traffic-calmed narrow inner city streets.

      @hanneken4026@hanneken40264 ай бұрын
    • Exactly what I thought. I mean, it's fine for most people considering the low traffic volume, but it would be a nightmare for any wheelchair user. I guess that doesn't matter if the houses along that street are not wheelchair accessible either.

      @klapiroska4714@klapiroska47144 ай бұрын
    • If you look at 10:11 you see that the sidewalk near the garage boxes is only as wide as how far the garage door swings out, then the road seems to be the minimum size of a one lane road, and the parking spots seem to be minimum size too. The street lights in the foreground where the road is wider - the space between the houses and the NS access road is triangle shaped - are as close to the curb as they always are, which is probably to prevent street lamp - car side mirror collisions. Why they weren't moved closer to the new curb but left in their old location (the sidewalk across from the garages is already widened compared to the old situation) in the background I don't know. Maybe because of other utilities competing for space? What impedes the sidewalk is the residents outside benches. Those are common in streets like this though, as the sidewalk is only really used for stepping onto when a car wants to pass, usually people walk on the road on streets like this.

      @J0k394@J0k3944 ай бұрын
    • personally i woult have preferred a woonerf design with everything on one level since it is a dead end street

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes4 ай бұрын
  • Loved it!

    @stanbruining@stanbruining4 ай бұрын
  • Is reusing klinkers or cobbles something unusual? My own city (not in NL) is reusing paving stone all the time, with most of the material used today during new street construction and rebuilding dates back to early 1900s. There are designated plots of land outside the city were the old cobbles are stored and whenever the material is needed they just take it from there. New stone is only really needed for curbs and larger pieces which tend to break more often or need to be of specific dimentions. A great advantage of using these cobbles is that if an underground cable or a pipe needs to be accessed it only takes two workers with a shovel and a crowbar to open up a hole in the pavement and after the work is done they can fix it themselves.

    @kacperwoch4368@kacperwoch43684 ай бұрын
  • damned, thats a lovely street, also, the curve in the border between the road and the space before the parking boxes is also very useful if you have to overtake say a street parked car (due to moving or smth) while on a bike, and ofcourse they're great for anyone in a wheel chair

    @scaptal@scaptal3 ай бұрын
  • A guy from California with a Engineering degree who comes and live here in The Netherlands? A bit weird but with the speed you got your bike up that rack, i'm pretty sure you've always been a Dutchman. New sub, en de groeten uit Brabant

    @stonedmountainunicorn9532@stonedmountainunicorn95324 ай бұрын
  • Great video! Very interesting stuff. You should redo that final walk on a sunny spring day!

    @arjen1315@arjen13154 ай бұрын
  • this is the third video i see from you. and the third time i really enjoyed it. content, presentation and pace are great! so it is time for an abo. keep up the good work and enjoy yor study and stay in NL

    @Jonathan-kraai@Jonathan-kraai4 ай бұрын
  • Thanks, now I'm going to constantly look down and think about the klinker pattern 😂

    @akn3207@akn32074 ай бұрын
  • It's so fascinating how I can still learn new things about my home city until this very day. In hindsight it should have been obvious but I never connected the dots to realize the Grote Markt has reused klinkers to create the more old-timey look.

    @fukeiclozer2614@fukeiclozer26144 ай бұрын
  • Nice to se how things are done elsewhere. thanks

    @markfrye9178@markfrye91784 ай бұрын
  • It is so good. Avoiding plastics and reuse! ❤

    @guyroebuck8510@guyroebuck85103 ай бұрын
  • Working at the road consturction has been my summer job here in the NL for 4 years. It payed ok for under 18 years old. Always good times in the hot sun.

    @user-kk1ls8mo6q@user-kk1ls8mo6q4 ай бұрын
  • My (Dutch) street will look somewhat similar in the upcoming time. Hats off however to the municipality, very comprehensive communication, and home visit to write up details per house.

    @steveman1982@steveman19824 ай бұрын
  • Walking, running, bicycles, escooters, green open spaces, electric buses, electric commuter trains and trams are all parts of a good transportation system. Speak up for improved transportation options in your city. Every train station needs safe, protected places to park and lock bicycles. Children and older adults should be able to ride bicycles to work, school or for fun safely.

    @KJSvitko@KJSvitko4 ай бұрын
  • Thank you very nice video

    @davidchristensen6908@davidchristensen69084 ай бұрын
  • I'm curious to see how it will look in the summer when the grass and trees have grown

    @j.dekker5137@j.dekker51374 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing this! I wonder why the city didn’t consider underground garbage bins instead of the giant exterior garbage bins when reconstructing the street. They’re pretty common throughout the country and it makes a meaningful improvement not just aesthetically but also accessibility as the large bins reduce some sidewalk space.

    @stefanluciaan@stefanluciaan4 ай бұрын
    • The underground bins are really deep, there might be problems with either the ground water level in that area being too high for them, or the utility lines might have precluded a dig that deep

      @J0k394@J0k3944 ай бұрын
    • there was a lot of pushback from residents who wanted to keep as much parking as possible. Thats the hard thing about pushing forward a new policy but not irritating everyone so much that it produces a political backlash.

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes4 ай бұрын
    • @@J0k394 The ground water levels shouldn't be a problem. I used to live in the Haarlemmermeer (one of the lowest points in the country, below sealevel) and we had underground containers....so Haarlem should be okay to use them :) But perhaps, like you said, something else might have been in the ground there.

      @BuzzinsPetRock78@BuzzinsPetRock784 ай бұрын
    • 1: The underground containers are large and wide (3m) so the street is too narrow. 2: The trucks that empty those underground containers are larger than regular garbage trucks and therefore heavier. The street then suffers damage due to the excessive weight.

      @martinhemme7890@martinhemme78903 ай бұрын
    • @@martinhemme7890 those containers come in different sizes, both large and small. The ones in my Street are something like 2x2, but I've seen narrowed ones too

      @BuzzinsPetRock78@BuzzinsPetRock783 ай бұрын
  • What I really want to know is why don't we use klinkers, bricks or pavers more often in North America, Canada and the US. For sustainability, easy repairs below and above surface, and reusable aspect it just makes sense. Especially compared to asphalt which emits more CO2 in production and layering.

    @pbilk@pbilk4 ай бұрын
  • I recognized this street immediately! My uncle used to live here. Few houses from the hells Angels haha. I used to visit him and play retro games on his laptop. Funny to see it appear in a randomly recommended youtube video.

    @liljippah2300@liljippah23004 ай бұрын
    • Same here. A friend of mine used to live there.

      @roetietoe@roetietoe3 ай бұрын
  • great channel! :)

    @squarecircle1473@squarecircle14734 ай бұрын
  • i love everything about this

    @everydayengineering@everydayengineering4 ай бұрын
    • its just a day of work in everyday engineering

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes4 ай бұрын
  • Cool that they did it properly. I live in Groningen and they started working on the pipes in fall. Unfortunately, winter came and they took a long break until spring. Only to come back the next fall to do the electric part...

    @vlaicud@vlaicud4 ай бұрын
    • Groningen really is its own kind of suck in these cases. Just 20km south in Assen they've finished doing a lot of wiring work in a matter of weeks, and since about 2 years ago pretty much all traffic lights have good and functional sensors. Driving in Groningen is a mess because they're so far behind when it comes down to traffic light design.

      @therealdutchidiot@therealdutchidiot4 ай бұрын
  • Yea! Our street too in Utrecht. The gemeente told us it would take only 30 -52 weeks. Nw they are working on it for over 2 years and its far from done.

    @Nobudd0@Nobudd04 ай бұрын
    • Oops....

      @lbergen001@lbergen0014 ай бұрын
    • Haverstraat by any chance?

      @rvdb7363@rvdb73634 ай бұрын
    • Nope, somewhere in Utrecht.

      @Nobudd0@Nobudd04 ай бұрын
    • @nobody_story129 Haverstraat is also in Utrecht ;) city centre, connecting Oude Gracht to Springweg. Or it _should_ be connecting those two streets. The street has been broken up for ages and it doesn't look like they'll finish any time soon.

      @rvdb7363@rvdb73634 ай бұрын
    • ​@@rvdb7363 Oh, I live closer to Leidsche Rijn.

      @Nobudd0@Nobudd04 ай бұрын
  • The love for using 'second hand' klinkers has resulted in them being more expensive than new ones. If streets are drastically redesigned causing leftover klinkers, they are often stored by the municipality for upcoming projects.

    @Deblijeegel@Deblijeegel4 ай бұрын
    • And if you have some left over after repaving your driveway you stack them in the backyard or throw them in the cellar and save them for later.

      @TheSuperappelflap@TheSuperappelflap4 ай бұрын
  • It's interesting to see the way the "nature inclusive" requirements are taken in account when implementing more greens in these kinds of projects. Which is a lot of behind the scenes work from the ecological advisor bureaus. (They are also the reason why projects may take a while to actually start in some cases. Since they are also tasked with investigating if any of the laws will be broken.) Also, I love how the street just looks more spacious with the divisions between the lanes. Even though the width of the street didn't change at all.

    @FroslassManiac@FroslassManiac4 ай бұрын
  • I love Haarlem.

    @baronjutter@baronjutter4 ай бұрын
  • @7:30 they hardly damage but we do have a lot of sinking ground and with klinkers you can fill up and repair smaller portions easier, they also generally indicate low vehicle speeds and are designed to cause more tire noise to alert peds and bicyclists

    @arposkraft3616@arposkraft36164 ай бұрын
  • thank you for the video

    @kobjgdewschucrvtubnkm@kobjgdewschucrvtubnkm4 ай бұрын
  • When you create enough traffic circles, the tornedoes get confused and leave, as proven by the Netherlands.

    @zenddoor@zenddoor3 ай бұрын
    • Facts

      @buildthelanes@buildthelanes3 ай бұрын
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