Richseen Private Journeys · Netherlands & Western Europe

Dutch MotoGP: TT Assen — The Cathedral of Speed

MotoGP World Championship · TT Circuit Assen · Paris · Brussels · Bruges · Amsterdam
12 Days · 11 Nights
From USD 9,000+ per person
"TT Circuit Assen — the most celebrated venue in motorcycle racing, where the Dutch TT has been held every year since 1925."
The Journey

MotoGP, Louvre,
and the Dutch Canals

The Dutch MotoGP at TT Circuit Assen is the oldest and most celebrated venue in international motorcycle racing — the circuit that has held a round of the World Championship every year since the inaugural FIM World Championship in 1949 (and the Dutch TT in various forms since 1925), and which riders, teams, and spectators refer to as the "Cathedral of Speed" with the kind of reverential consistency that suggests the nickname has earned its place. The 4.54-kilometre circuit in the northern Dutch province of Drenthe has been a purpose-built racing venue since 1955, when the race was moved from public roads to a permanent track; the current configuration of 18 corners and the flowing, rhythmical corner sequences that motorcycle riders find uniquely satisfying to navigate at speed have made Assen the circuit that appears most frequently on lists of favourite MotoGP venues compiled by riders who have raced at all of them.

The Dutch MotoGP Grand Prix takes place annually at TT Circuit Assen, typically in late June — part of the European summer cluster, when the northern Dutch summer is at its most generous with daylight and the circuit's surrounding countryside is at its most atmospheric. The race weekend includes the Sprint Race (Saturday) and the Grand Prix (Sunday), with the Dutch crowd's passionate support for the sport producing an atmosphere that builds through the weekend to the Sunday race-day intensity that Assen is known for.

This twelve-day itinerary begins in Paris — with the Louvre, Versailles, Montmartre, and the Seine — before moving north through the French automotive culture of Lille, into Belgium for Bruges and Brussels, and on to the Netherlands for the race weekend and the five Dutch cities that complete the journey: Rotterdam, Delft, The Hague, Giethoorn, and Amsterdam. The itinerary concludes at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, making it one of the most logistically coherent cross-border journeys in the Western European MotoGP calendar.

Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🏍️
Dutch MotoGP — TT Assen, the Cathedral of Speed
TT Circuit Assen: 4.54 kilometres, 18 corners, and the most celebrated venue in motorcycle racing history. The Dutch TT has been held here every year since 1925 — the longest unbroken tradition in international motorcycle sport. Full three-day access: practice, qualifying, Sprint Race on Saturday, and the Grand Prix on Sunday. The flowing, rhythmical corner sequences that motorcycle riders rate as the most satisfying to navigate at speed of any permanent circuit on the calendar.
02🗼
Paris — Louvre, Versailles, and the Seine
Three days of Paris: the Louvre for the Winged Victory and the Mona Lisa; Versailles for the Hall of Mirrors and the Grand Canal in the morning before the tour coaches arrive; the Musée d'Orsay for the Impressionist collection; Montmartre for the Sacré-Cœur and the artists' quarter; and the Seine river cruise that makes the historical geography of the city comprehensible as a sequence of layers rather than a collection of isolated monuments.
03🚗
Lille Antique Car Museum and Classic Car Tour
The antique car museum and classic car tour of Lille — the Franco-Belgian border city that has been one of the most undervisited major French cities for decades. The most comprehensive collection of historic European automobiles in the region; the classic car tour through the Vieille Bourse and Grande Place; and the Euralille district's contrasting modernity. For the guest whose interest in MotoGP extends to the automotive culture that preceded and surrounds it.
04🏘️
Bruges — The Medieval City Preserved in Amber
Bruges — the UNESCO World Heritage medieval city whose canal network, belfry, and Flemish Gothic architecture have been preserved since the fifteenth century, when the harbour silted up, the Hanseatic League moved to Antwerp, and the city's commercial importance ceased — leaving its architecture in the condition that the prosperity that built it left it in. The Minnewater (Lake of Love); the Béguinage (a UNESCO Heritage Site within a UNESCO Heritage City); and the view of the belfry from the Market Square.
05🎨
Amsterdam — Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh, and the Canals
Amsterdam's cultural triangle: the Rijksmuseum for Rembrandt's Night Watch and Vermeer's The Milkmaid — the most complete account of the Dutch Golden Age in a single institution; the Van Gogh Museum for 200 paintings spanning the artist's decade from the dark Nuenen period to the saturated colour of the Arles works; and the seventeenth-century canal ring (UNESCO World Heritage) for the evening canal boat tour that makes the city's extraordinary urban configuration comprehensible from the water.
06🚤
Giethoorn — The Village Without Roads
Giethoorn in the Weerribben-Wieden National Park — the Dutch village of 2,600 residents where the canal network that replaced the peat extraction channels of the fourteenth century has left a settlement accessible only by water, foot, and bicycle. The 8-kilometre canal system; the thatched farmhouses on artificial islands; and the self-drive canal boat hire that provides the most comprehensively Dutch afternoon available within two hours of Assen. The village that has been called the "Venice of the North" since at least 1958.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The Dutch MotoGP Grand Prix takes place annually at TT Circuit Assen in the northern Netherlands, typically in late June. The race weekend includes the Sprint Race on Saturday and the Grand Prix on Sunday. The itinerary begins in Paris and moves north through France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, concluding in Amsterdam — covering Paris, Lille, Bruges, Brussels, Rotterdam, Assen, Giethoorn, Delft, The Hague, and Amsterdam across twelve days.

Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Race dates, grandstand allocation, and hotel are confirmed upon ticket issuance for the relevant season.

Days 1–2
Paris — Montmartre · Seine Cruise · Louvre · Musée d'Orsay
Arrive at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport. Day 1: Montmartre and the Sacré-Cœur; the Seine cruise from Pont de l'Alma to Notre-Dame and back, with the Musée d'Orsay on the Left Bank and the Eiffel Tower at the western end. Day 2: the Louvre at morning opening — the Winged Victory of Samothrace, the Venus de Milo, and the Mona Lisa in the conditions before 9.6 million annual visitors create the afternoon atmosphere. The Tuileries Garden. The Musée d'Orsay for the Impressionist collection: Monet, Renoir, Degas, Cézanne, and the Van Gogh self-portraits that anticipate the Amsterdam collection that the itinerary will reach later.
Paris Hotel (Left Bank 5-star or equivalent)
Day 3
Versailles · Champs-Élysées · Arc de Triomphe
Morning: Versailles by RER — the Hall of Mirrors, the Grand Canal, and the Trianon estates before the midday crowds convert the most visited palace in France into a managed flow. The Petit Trianon and Marie Antoinette's hamlet in the afternoon. Return to Paris: the Champs-Élysées to the Arc de Triomphe, with the view from the roof of the twelve avenues radiating in every direction from Napoleon's monument. Dinner in the Marais neighbourhood.
Paris
Day 4
Lille — Antique Car Museum · Classic Car City Tour · Belgium
Drive north from Paris to Lille (1 hour). The antique car museum: the most comprehensive collection of historic European automobiles assembled in the Franco-Belgian border region. The classic car tour of Lille: the Vieille Bourse, the Grande Place, and the Place du Théâtre in vintage automobiles that provide the most appropriate transport for a city whose Baroque civic architecture represents French urban planning at its most ambitious. Drive into Belgium for the evening arrival in Bruges.
Bruges Hotel
Day 5
Bruges · Brussels — Grand-Place · Atomium · Manneken Pis
Morning: Bruges — the Minnewater, the Béguinage, the Belfry (366 steps, 83 metres, with 47 bells in the carillon), and the Groeningemuseum for the Flemish Primitives collection (van Eyck's Madonna with Canon van der Paele). Afternoon: Brussels — the Grand-Place (Victor Hugo called it the most beautiful square in the world; the guild houses that surround it were largely rebuilt after the French bombardment of 1695 and are more beautiful as a result); the Atomium (André Waterkeyn's 1958 model of an iron crystal magnified 165 billion times); and the Manneken Pis.
Brussels / Netherlands
Day 6
Rotterdam — Cube Houses · Market Hall · MotoGP Practice
Drive north into the Netherlands to Rotterdam — the largest port in Europe, entirely rebuilt after the 1940 German bombing, and now the most architecturally progressive city in the Netherlands: Piet Blom's Cube Houses (1984), the Markthal (MVRDV, 2014, whose arched interior is covered in 11,000 square metres of food-themed artwork), and Rem Koolhaas's Kunsthal. Drive northeast to Assen for MotoGP Free Practice — the first session at the circuit that has held motorcycle racing longer than any other permanent venue on Earth.
TT Circuit Assen — Practice
Day 7
MotoGP Qualifying + Sprint Race
Full day at TT Circuit Assen — Qualifying sessions for MotoGP, Moto2, and Moto3, where the flowing 18-corner layout produces the most rhythmically complex qualifying laps in the World Championship. The Sprint Race in the afternoon: the 13-lap Saturday race at the circuit whose corner sequences reward the riders who have fully committed the layout to instinct rather than conscious navigation — the circuit where the difference between a good lap and a great lap is most clearly attributable to rider feel rather than machinery specification.
TT Circuit Assen — Qualifying + Sprint
Day 8
Dutch MotoGP Grand Prix
Race day at TT Circuit Assen — the Dutch MotoGP Grand Prix, 26 laps of the 4.54-kilometre circuit that has been the "Cathedral of Speed" since the Dutch TT was first formalised in 1925. The flowing sequence of 18 corners — no single corner is as dramatic as those at Mugello or as technically demanding as Suzuka's Esses, but the combination of all 18 into a complete rhythmic whole makes the Assen lap the most satisfying sustained sequence in the World Championship for the riders who can find its rhythm. The Dutch crowd at full capacity: the most enthusiastic weekend audience in northern European MotoGP.
TT Circuit Assen — Grand Prix
Day 9
Giethoorn · Delft · The Hague
Morning: Giethoorn — the village without roads, where self-drive canal boats navigate the 8-kilometre waterway system between thatched farmhouses on artificial peat islands. The Weerribben-Wieden National Park surrounding the village. Afternoon: Delft — the blue-and-white pottery city where Johannes Vermeer was born (1632), worked, and died (1675); the Nieuwe Kerk where William of Orange is buried; and the Markt with the Gothic City Hall opposite the church. The Hague: the seat of Dutch government, the International Court of Justice, the Mauritshuis for Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring and Rembrandt's The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp.
Amsterdam Hotel
Days 10–11
Amsterdam — Rijksmuseum · Van Gogh · Canals · This Is Holland
Day 10: the Rijksmuseum — the Night Watch in the Gallery of Honour; the Vermeer collection; and the 8,000 objects of the Dutch Golden Age in the surrounding rooms. The Van Gogh Museum: 200 paintings from the decade before the artist's death in 1890. The canal district — the Herengracht, Keizersgracht, and Prinsengracht — for the afternoon canal boat tour that reveals Amsterdam's seventeenth-century urban planning as a coherent engineering achievement. Day 11: the Anne Frank House on the Prinsengracht; the This Is Holland 5D flight experience over the Netherlands; the Jordaan neighbourhood for the galleries, bookshops, and cheese shops.
Amsterdam
Day 12
Departure — Amsterdam
Final morning in Amsterdam — the Albert Cuyp Market in De Pijp (the largest street market in the Netherlands, operating since 1905, with 260 stalls of fresh produce and Dutch street food); or the Vondelpark for the morning cycling culture that makes Amsterdam the most functionally bicycle-dependent city in Europe. Private transfer to Amsterdam Schiphol Airport for onward journey.
Amsterdam Schiphol Airport
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

8 Quai du Louvre, Paris, France
Paris — 3 Nights
Cheval Blanc Paris
8 Quai du Louvre, 1st Arrondissement, Paris, France
Cheval Blanc Paris — LVMH's flagship hotel on the Quai du Louvre, where the Seine, the Pont Neuf, and the Louvre's west façade define the view from the river-facing suites. The Plénitude restaurant's Michelin star; Maxime Frédéric's pastry atelier; and the most architecturally considered hotel opening in Paris in a decade, two minutes from the Louvre and five from the Musée d'Orsay by taxi.
Leopoldstraat, Antwerp, Belgium
Antwerp — 1 Night
Botanic Sanctuary Antwerp
Leopoldstraat, Antwerp, Belgium
Botanic Sanctuary Antwerp — a Leading Hotels of the World property in the heart of the Diamond Quarter, occupying a restored 19th-century neoclassical building with a private botanical garden. The Rubens House two minutes away; the Grote Markt and the Cathedral of Our Lady within walking distance; and the fashion district of the Nationalestraat that has made Antwerp the most credible rival to Paris in European design since the Antwerp Six emerged in the 1980s.
Nieuwe Doelenstraat, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Amsterdam — 3 Nights
De L'Europe Amsterdam
Nieuwe Doelenstraat, Amsterdam, Netherlands
De L'Europe Amsterdam — the 1896 hotel on the Amstel where the river meets the Kloveniersburgwal, with the Rijksmuseum, the Rembrandt House, and the Flower Market all within five minutes on foot. The Bord'Eau restaurant with its canal-facing terrace; the Freddy's Bar named for the hotel's legendary concierge; and the most historically grounded luxury address in Amsterdam, combining the Golden Age canal architecture with contemporary service on the bend where the Amstel has been welcoming travellers since the city was founded on its banks.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🏍️
MotoGP
TT Assen — The Rhythm of 18 Corners
The TT Circuit Assen at race speed — the 4.54-kilometre sequence of 18 corners whose flowing, connected character produces a lap that experienced MotoGP riders describe in musical terms: not a series of individual challenges but a sustained rhythm where the exit of each corner feeds directly into the approach to the next. The circuit that has been producing this experience for Dutch TT riders and spectators since 1925, and which no redesign or reconfiguration has fundamentally altered. The "Cathedral of Speed" — a nickname that has been in use for long enough to require no further explanation to anyone who has been to Assen.
🎨
Art
Night Watch — Rembrandt's 4.37-Metre Statement
Rembrandt van Rijn's Night Watch (1642) in the Rijksmuseum's Gallery of Honour — the largest and most technically ambitious painting of the Dutch Golden Age, measuring 3.63 by 4.37 metres, depicting the company of Captain Frans Banninck Cocq in the moment of preparation for a civic guard exercise. It was trimmed on all four sides when moved to the Amsterdam Town Hall in 1715; the original dimensions are known from a 1653 copy. At the original trimmed scale it is still the most ambitious group portrait in European painting, and the one that most comprehensively changed the understanding of what a group portrait was permitted to do.
🚤
Waterway
Giethoorn — Self-Drive Through the Peat Island Village
The Giethoorn self-drive canal boat — a flat-bottomed whisper boat navigated through the 8-kilometre waterway system of the village without roads, where the only sounds are water, birds, and the occasional bicycle passing on the towpath above. The peat island landscape was created by fourteenth-century peat extraction that left a network of channels between the extracted areas; the village that grew in this geography is the most complete expression of Dutch water management as a domestic rather than industrial practice. The most genuinely peaceful afternoon available within two hours of Amsterdam.
🏰
Heritage
Girl with a Pearl Earring — Vermeer at the Mauritshuis
Johannes Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring (c. 1665) in the Mauritshuis in The Hague — the painting that the art historian and novelist Tracy Chevalier called "the Mona Lisa of the North" for the figure's direct gaze and the ambiguity of her relationship to the viewer: is she looking at you, or were you looking at her? Vermeer painted it in Delft, 12 kilometres from The Hague, in the decade before his death in 1675 left his wife and eleven children with debts that required the sale of his entire estate and the paintings that were in his studio at the time.
Visual Journey

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