Landscape openness
The most open areas in the Netherlands are the large water bodies, the northern marine clay and peat areas and the IJsselmeer polders. The most enclosed and small-scale landscapes are found throughout the Netherlands, but predominantly on sandy soils. The province of Friesland has the highest percentage of very open areas, because it contains a large part of the IJsselmeer lake and has many open marine clay landscapes. Limburg, Noord-Brabant and Gelderland are provinces with more enclosed landscape types because of the many trees, copses and woods in these provinces.
Openness in the landscape
The variation in openness of the Dutch landscape has its origins in the history of settlement and cultivation. Today, openness is not only a factor in how people perceive and experience the landscape, but also in the suitability of the landscape as a habitat for animal species. For example, meadow birds need open landscapes, while birds of scrub and woodlands require more enclosed landscapes. The large water bodies are the most open areas, followed by landscapes of the northern marine clay and peat areas and the IJsselmeer polders.
The most enclosed landscapes are found throughout the Netherlands, but mainly on the higher ground with sandy soils.
Large differences in openness
The degree of openness of the landscape is determined by the presence or absence of elements above eye level in the surrounding area: slopes, tall vegetation such as woods, tree belts and wooded banks, the built-up areas of towns and villages, and houses and other buildings in the landscape. The map shows the visible surface areas (in hectares) from a given point in the landscape for the 2018 monitoring year; the larger the number of hectares of land that are visible, the greater the openness. The very open areas are in the marine clay regions in the north and south-west, the IJsselmeer polders, parts of the peat meadow areas in the west and the Veenkoloniƫn region of reclaimed peat workings in the north-east. In these areas the tall vegetation and buildings are mainly clustered in and around the villages and farmyards.
Sources
- Dijkstra, H. and J. van Lith-Kranendonk (2000). Schaalkenmerken van het landschap in Nederland. Rapport 040. Alterra, Wageningen.
- Meeuwsen, H.A.M. and R. Jochem (2011). Openheid van het landschap berekend met het model ViewScape. WOT werkdocument 281. WOT Natuur & Milieu, Wageningen UR, Wageningen.
- Openness indicator in the Monitor Landschap
Technical explanation
- Name of the data
- -
- Description
- -
- Responsible institute
- -
- Calculation method
- -
- Base table
- -
- Geographical distribution
- -
- Publication frequency
- -
- Trust code
- -
Archive of this indicator
Reference of this webpage
CLO (2022). Landscape openness (indicator 1022, version 05, ), www.clo.nl. Statistics Netherlands (CBS), The Hague; PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, The Hague; RIVM National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven; and Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen.