Meerzicht-Oost, Zoetermeer
NeighbourhoodThis terraced house on Schuitwater sits in a leafy part of Meerzicht-Oost, where the street feels calm and residential. With 136 m² of living space and a 152 m² plot, it is a roomy family home built in 1974 with energy label B. The asking price of €475,000 is 21% above the neighbourhood average of €392,321, but the floor area is 28% larger than the local norm of 106 m², so the price per square metre is in line with the market. For context, there are currently 21 terraced houses in Zoetermeer for sale.
Meerzicht-Oost is a neighbourhood with strong contrasts. One resident says: 'I live here with great pleasure. It is a quiet, green and pleasant neighbourhood where you can enjoy walking and nature. Everything you need is nearby.' Another describes 'green poverty', noting that many trees have been cut down and benches removed, leading to a decline in birds and social contact. A third review mentions a 'multicultural society' and points to deterioration, litter, and a feeling of unsafety after dark. Based on three reviews, the neighbourhood clearly has both its advocates and critics. The area is densely built with a mix of flats and houses, and the population includes many families and older residents. For more details, see the Meerzicht-Oost neighbourhood.
For your morning bread run, Albert Heijn and Jumbo are both just around the corner, and a SPAR express is a couple of streets away. Primary schools are close: Kindcentrum De Entree is a five-minute walk, and IKC De Piramide is just under 500 metres. The neighbourhood has a park or public garden within a couple of streets away, and a GP practice is a ten-minute walk. For secondary education, the nearest school is about 2 km away. The municipality of Zoetermeer provides the broader context for these amenities, as described on the municipality of Zoetermeer page.
At present, the home is listed through several channels, including Van Brero & Breugem Makelaardij bv.
Details of this home
Schuitwater 19, Zoetermeer
Fair · 2 residents
I live here with great pleasure. It is a quiet, green and pleasant neighbourhood where you can enjoy walking and nature. Everything you need is nearby (such as shops, public transport and other amenities). The neighbours are friendly and helpful, and there is a pleasant atmosphere. I feel safe here and can definitely recommend this neighbourhood.
Auto-translated to English by AIMeerzicht used to be a beautiful green neighbourhood, with many lovely tall trees and shrubs, rich in birds, bird concerts at various times from early morning to late evening. Benches in the park and other spots every few hundred metres where you could safely enjoy and meet others. Now too many tall trees have been cut down, often for completely unclear reasons, a park with only a few trees, almost all shrubs cut to the ground, hardly any benches left. It has become quiet. Birds are no longer allowed to be fed, they have nowhere to nest, benches are gone. Vandalism, unsafety, pollution, litter, decay and loneliness are visibly increasing. People no longer want to know each other. This is not only due to the increased multicultural society, although it does contribute to it. Children learn little in that regard, compared to the stricter upbringing in the past at home, at school and being addressed on the street. There are so many studies on how important trees and well-maintained greenery are for the social climate and behaviour in a neighbourhood. Trees provide oxygen, air purification, shade and coolness in the heat and shelter, noise reduction, besides all the animals, insects, birds that live in them. People behave better in a well-maintained green neighbourhood. That is why this large-scale removal of all greenery is incomprehensible and almost criminal. There is far too little replacement planting. We cannot enjoy what might have a chance in fifty years to survive the blunt axes. And there are no benches to rest for a moment and for social contacts. We are stuck with green poverty now, vanished birds, loneliness.
Auto-translated to English by AIThe neighbourhood is really deteriorating. Unsafe feeling. Go outside as little as possible in the dark. There are quite a few polluters who couldn't care less. Litter, cigarette butts, vandalism, drugs, damaged cars, burglaries, occasional loud noise, fireworks all year round. Parking nuisance and traffic jams on Fridays. People don't dare to address each other. A number of volunteers try to make improvements by picking up rubbish and such, nice neighbourhood initiatives for their own flat or street, neighbourhood management tries to help improve, municipal subsidy for that. In combination with sustainability actions we are waiting for. All ages. So facilities for the elderly are also needed, I've been calling for more benches, a community garden, low-threshold meeting spaces for all target groups for years. All of that used to be there and that's how there was more community in the literal sense. Since Palenstein moved in this direction, deterioration has accelerated rapidly. We have a RandstadRail stop, but there is no longer a neighbourhood bus, much too far to walk if you live further away. The flats and shopping centre are old and urgently need a thorough renovation. A lot of deferred maintenance. There is also an urgent need for housing here. Although some are occupied by people who have them for free and are themselves long-term in their home country. There are many primary schools in this district. I don't have children myself, so I can't judge the quality. Far too many trees have been cut down, bushes removed, birds can hardly find perches anymore, so there are few. We can hardly attract them by feeding because of severe mice and rat infestation. The park is far too bare. Due to a water project, many old large trees have disappeared and little replanting. And many more tree removals are on the list. Maintenance and care of existing greenery is apparently too expensive. There are tree doctors who could possibly help the old trees too. Much more greenery should be added, also on the flats, galleries, etc. For appearance, birds, insects, bees and butterflies especially. It also makes people happier and more involved and reduces vandalism. That's psychologically proven. Monthly bulky waste collection should return. Possibly a different day per district or group of streets. That would save a lot of illegal dumping. And who knows, promote recycling. Due to vandalism, we cannot place a mini library or give-away boxes, not even a notice board with offers, even though there is a need for that. In the past, there were many spaces that could be rented cheaply by associations and small entrepreneurs. Around the shopping centre. The range of shops was also much more complete with a Blokker, DIY store, shoe shop, heel bar, Jamin, Readshop, etc. Now everything is gone and unaffordable. Many people try to move to better neighbourhoods. There is loneliness. Someone lay dead in their house for four months and that's not the first time. Days, weeks have also occurred. The environment is not really inspiring, little involvement due to the deterioration and few free or cheap options.
Auto-translated to English by AIData from Meerzicht-Oost
Data from Meerzicht-Oost
33 within 5 km
73 within 5 km
About Schuitwater 19, Zoetermeer
The asking price is 21% above the neighbourhood average of €392,321, but the house is also 28% larger than the average home in Meerzicht-Oost (136 m² vs 106 m²). The price per square metre works out to about €3,493, which is slightly below the neighbourhood average of €3,599 per m². So the price is in line with the market given the extra space.
Meerzicht-Oost gets mixed reviews. Some residents praise the quiet, green setting and convenient amenities, while others point to a decline in greenery, increased litter, and a feeling of unsafety after dark. The area is densely populated with a mix of ages and backgrounds. It has a park nearby and good access to shops and public transport, but some residents feel the neighbourhood has deteriorated.
The nearest train station is 2.7 km from the house, which is about a 30-minute walk or a short bike ride. There is also a RandstadRail stop in the neighbourhood, according to residents.
Several primary schools are within walking distance: Kindcentrum De Entree at 241 m, IKC De Piramide at 478 m, and Katholieke basisschool De Regenboog at 582 m. For secondary education, the nearest school is about 2 km away.
The house has energy label B, which is reasonably efficient. In the neighbourhood, about 19% of homes have label A and 9.5% have label B, so this home is above average for the area. You can expect moderate energy costs.
6 homes in the neighbourhood Meerzicht-Oost