i am hopeing that someone my help me find a resourse for finding a job in the nederlands. i am an american citizen and i would like to move to the nederland permenantly. all comments are welcome. thanks.
as a-f points out... getting a work permit is quite seriously a very very very tricky endeavour. it escalates to impossible if you're above 30. regardless of your architectural skills, this is an administrative, paperological issue. have a look at the IND site and enquire about us-nl youth exchange programmes... save yourself a good deal of frustration. good luck, cheers
a close friend of mine, his family (german and dutch) were heavily affected by the holocaust, and as a result, he was able to obtain citizenship and work in the e.u.
Could be a bit hard as there are many architects out here, all of them with a working permit.... But it isn't impossible. Although not necessary but do you speak Dutch? Why Holland? Why permenantly?
You always could marry a Dutch girl and wait a couple of years on your permit :)
separate from the issue of getting permission to work in the netherlands, it seems like jobs come up in archinect's jobs section on a fairly regular basis.
god, my british passport is priceless. I can't wait to graduate and put this EU citizenship to good use...
Holland is a small country with a large population. Housing shortages and unemployment are particularly acute problems. The government wants to be able to guarantee that all foreigners admitted to the country will enjoy equal status and have the best possible chance of self-fulfillment. Admitting too many aliens would threaten those efforts. Therefore, only small numbers of foreigners are granted permission to stay in the Netherlands for a prolonged period.
EU and EEA nationals do not need a permit or visa to work or reside in the Netherlands. However, they do need the legal documents required to cross the border (such as a passport). Non-EU/EEA nationals (with the exception of a handful of countries) require an MVV (similar to a visa) to enter the country. This must be applied for with the Netherlands embassy or consulate in the home country before entering the Netherlands.
From which offices: OMA ... any more? These guys get 50 resumes a day.... There are some nice offices in NL but way too much architects. I would try some exchange program first. Working experience in NL, language is a must if you want to stay there. With that you will make more chance.
jobs in the nederlands
i am hopeing that someone my help me find a resourse for finding a job in the nederlands. i am an american citizen and i would like to move to the nederland permenantly. all comments are welcome. thanks.
- click "Vacatures"
on moving to Holland from abroad (working permit for non-EU citizens can be very tricky): IND
Why?
as a-f points out... getting a work permit is quite seriously a very very very tricky endeavour. it escalates to impossible if you're above 30. regardless of your architectural skills, this is an administrative, paperological issue. have a look at the IND site and enquire about us-nl youth exchange programmes... save yourself a good deal of frustration. good luck, cheers
my father is an ex-pat, born in Utrecht, came over after war. i wonder if that would give me an assist if i wanted to go that route.
dream; summer in holland, winter in spain.
a close friend of mine, his family (german and dutch) were heavily affected by the holocaust, and as a result, he was able to obtain citizenship and work in the e.u.
Could be a bit hard as there are many architects out here, all of them with a working permit.... But it isn't impossible. Although not necessary but do you speak Dutch? Why Holland? Why permenantly?
You always could marry a Dutch girl and wait a couple of years on your permit :)
separate from the issue of getting permission to work in the netherlands, it seems like jobs come up in archinect's jobs section on a fairly regular basis.
god, my british passport is priceless. I can't wait to graduate and put this EU citizenship to good use...
Holland is a small country with a large population. Housing shortages and unemployment are particularly acute problems. The government wants to be able to guarantee that all foreigners admitted to the country will enjoy equal status and have the best possible chance of self-fulfillment. Admitting too many aliens would threaten those efforts. Therefore, only small numbers of foreigners are granted permission to stay in the Netherlands for a prolonged period.
EU and EEA nationals do not need a permit or visa to work or reside in the Netherlands. However, they do need the legal documents required to cross the border (such as a passport). Non-EU/EEA nationals (with the exception of a handful of countries) require an MVV (similar to a visa) to enter the country. This must be applied for with the Netherlands embassy or consulate in the home country before entering the Netherlands.
Have you checked out dutchgrammar.com?
this website might be helpful for legal stuff...
@Steven Ward.
From which offices: OMA ... any more? These guys get 50 resumes a day.... There are some nice offices in NL but way too much architects. I would try some exchange program first. Working experience in NL, language is a must if you want to stay there. With that you will make more chance.
ik plan on applying for reciprocity in NL and/or BE soon as i zijn een EU expat mijzelf
i would love to Live in my Oma's mansion she helped design it with the architect
you are a moron, jonas
and you calling names says more about U den mij
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