The fluttering of 40 miles of orange bunting and a hammer driving a nail into a wall to hold up orange tarps are the sounds of a Dutch summer of football in a normally drab suburban street in The Hague.
The Marktweg is one of several streets in the Netherlands that get an all-encompassing orange facelift during European Championships and World Cups when the national team — known as Oranje after the Dutch royal family and the colour of their shirts — are looking to add to the Euro it won 36 years ago.
For two months leading up to Euro 2024, which starts on Friday in Germany, a dedicated team of up to 10 volunteers — more at the weekends — has been decorating their street, creating not just an orange overload, but also a sense of community.
Houses are plastered with orange tarps and banners, street lights and trees are wrapped in orange, garbage containers are — you guessed it — orange, while litter bins are red, white and blue, the equally patriotic colours of the Dutch flag.
Even a crew of municipal workers fits in, decked out in uniforms of orange high-visibility clothes.
Macho Vink, a 35-year-old truck driver, is on a cherry picker banging nails into houses’ walls to secure tarps covering the entire street.
“It’s time for a big party,” he said. “Get some positivity back,” he added as the driver of a passing car tooted his horn and gave a thumbs up.
The decorations appeared in the street for the first time during Euro 1988 — where the Netherlands won their only major football tournament — in West Germany.
Danny van Dijk, one of the driving forces behind the decorations, said it’s been getting bigger and better ever since, with sponsorship from local businesses now helping to foot the bill.
“It started as a joke — hang a ball sprayed with text in a tree,” Van Dijk said.
But, the ball idea quickly snowballed into arguably the orangest place on the planet. However, some other equally lavishly decorated Dutch streets also seek to claim that honour.
“The neighbours liked it, we liked it and now every two years we’re up in the scaffolding and cherry pickers to decorate the street,” Van Dijk said.
The decorations draw visitors to the street and allow neighbours to get to know one another.
“You meet other people, have a chat. The children like it, the people like it. It really brings people together,” he added.
And, once the tournament ends for the Dutch team, Van Dijk is hoping this year it will be with captain Virgil van Dijk, with whom he has no relation, lifting the trophy.
The team of decorators then get back to work in the Marktweg.
“We wait for two or three days to recover from the hangover,” he said. “Then with 10 men, we take down everything. You come back and it’s all gone.”