Nieuwe Waterweg

51°56′31″N 4°11′29″E / 51.94194°N 4.19139°E / 51.94194; 4.19139

Nieuwe Waterweg
New Waterway
Location of Nieuwe Waterweg (including Het Scheur) in dark blue.
Location
CountryNetherlands
ProvinceSouth Holland
Physical characteristics
SourceNieuwe Maas
 • locationMaassluis
MouthMaasmond
 • location
Hook of Holland
Length20 km (12 mi)

The Nieuwe Waterweg ("New Waterway") is a ship canal in the Netherlands from het Scheur (a branch of the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta) west of the town of Maassluis to the North Sea at Hook of Holland: the Maasmond, where the Nieuwe Waterweg connects to the Maasgeul. It is the artificial mouth of the river Rhine.

The Nieuwe Waterweg, which opened in 1872 and has a length of approximately 20.5 kilometres (12.7 mi), was constructed to keep the city and port of Rotterdam accessible to seafaring vessels as the natural Meuse-Rhine branches silted up.[1] The Waterway is a busy shipping route since it is the primary access to one of the busiest ports in the world, the Port of Rotterdam. At the entrance to the sea, a flood protection system called Maeslantkering has been installed (completed in 1997). There are no bridges or tunnels across the Nieuwe Waterweg.

  1. ^ Website Rijkswaterstaat about Nieuwe Waterweg, visited: 24 April 2012