From July 7 to August 4, the exhibition 100 Years Julianakerk & Julianaplaza takes visitors in the Atrium City Hall on a journey through one hundred years of history of the Julianakerk, the Transvaal district, and the development of Juliana Plaza from 1926 as a social meeting place in The Hague. Through historical archive images, contemporary photography, quotes, and short text excerpts, a visual timeline emerges in which encounter, connection, and social change take center stage.

Historical black-and-white photography is combined with warm contemporary images of residents, activities, and encounters within Juliana Plaza. Themes such as community, migration, connection, solidarity, and living together run throughout the entire exhibition.

In 1926, the Julianakerk was built here: a church for a growing new neighbourhood. Generations of residents gathered here for faith, music, youth activities and support during difficult times. For many years, the church became an important landmark in Transvaal.

Today, this place is known as Julianaplaza. It continues to be a meeting place for the community, centred around connection, social involvement and togetherness. Intern

This exhibition takes you through one hundred years of history of the building, the neighbourhood and the people connected to it. From church to community space, from past to future.

For more information, go to www.julianaplaza.nl.