The last several years have seen a growing awareness of the often-invisible structures of racism and white privilege in Dutch society. Only a little over a year ago, on June 10, 2020, people gathered in Amsterdam Zuidoost for the largest anti-racist protests ever seen in the Netherlands. Similarly, the academic field of geography shows a nascent interest in shifting the analytical lens away from spaces racialized as non-white to scrutinizing the socio-spatial formation of whiteness. How does whiteness give meaning to places? And how does it affect the experiences of white people and people of color moving through such places?