logo
AI-powered tour brings Anne Frank's story to life in Amsterdam

AI-powered tour brings Anne Frank's story to life in Amsterdam

France 242 days ago
In 2025, using Artificial Intelligence, a new immersive guided tour traces the route of this Amsterdam icon through the city, offering an interactive smartphone reconstruction of the Dutch Jewish experience under Nazi occupation.
"We created this product to bring Anne Frank closer to more people," said Moti Erdeapel, director of CityFans, the tourism-tech firm behind the project.
"The Anne Frank House, the museum, is a very small place and it has limited capacity, so a lot of people come here and get disappointed because they didn't get to visit Anne Frank," he said.
Each year, more than one million tourists visit the narrow house and annex where the Jewish girl and her family hid from the Nazis for two years.
To visit the place where Anne Frank wrote her famous diary, visitors must book six weeks in advance. Tickets sell out fast.
All that is required for the virtual tour is a mobile phone and a pair of headphones. A unique code grants access to a seven-kilometre (four-mile), 12-stop route.
An audio narrative guides the visitor, along with lifelike animations generated by AI using data from the Anne Frank Institute, the city of Amsterdam and the Holocaust museum.
'Incredible people'
"We tried to dig up stories that maybe most people don't really know but are incredible, people that really risked their lives to save children and to smuggle them out of the Nazis' hands into hiding," Erdeapel said.
One stop features the former home of Miep Gies, the Dutch Catholic who helped hide the Frank family. Her face is brought to life using archive photographs and digital animation.
In the De Pijp district, the tour reveals that a coffeeshop now occupies the site of the former Koco ice cream parlour.
Run by German-Jewish refugees, the shop helped spark the only protest in Amsterdam against Nazi persecution of Jews -- a demonstration that was violently crushed.
"One of the things that make it close to heart is not only that it's such an important story for Amsterdam, but also for me personally, coming from a family of Holocaust survivors," said Erdeapel, who is of Polish and Hungarian Jewish descent.
"My grandparents survived the Holocaust, a lot of the family members did, and I grew up with these stories about the Holocaust and about people that didn't make it back," said the 45-year-old Amsterdam resident.
Though he stresses the importance of museums and the diary, Erdeapel sees this guided tour as a way to tell Anne Frank's story to a new, tech-savvy generation.
"It's really important that we do good research and we work on storytelling and there's a human aspect to the creation," he said.
"If you have a deep process to develop this product, I think AI is just going to make things more beautiful and exciting and immersive for everyone."
Around 107,000 Dutch Jews and refugees were deported during World War II. Of these, 102,000 -- including Anne Frank -- were killed, roughly 75 percent of the pre-war Jewish population.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A cultural stroll through Vienna with conductor Laurence Equilbey and singer Katia Ledoux
A cultural stroll through Vienna with conductor Laurence Equilbey and singer Katia Ledoux

France 24

time17 hours ago

  • France 24

A cultural stroll through Vienna with conductor Laurence Equilbey and singer Katia Ledoux

Culture 16:00 16:00 min This week, Paris des Arts is in Vienna, where musical tradition flirts with modernity. We meet some of the city's most vibrant figures, such as the visionary conductor Laurence Equilbey. She's at the helm of the Insula Orchestra, who are performing for the first time at the Musikverein's legendary "Golden Hall". Her chamber choir "Accentus" and the "Insula Orchestra" are taking on Robert Schumann's "Paradise and the Peri". From one musical establishment to another: we chat with the new face of "Carmen" at the Volksoper Opera house, Katia Ledoux. Finally, we take a tour in a famous "fiaker" horse and cart, to find the city's hidden treasures. Special thanks to: Volksoper Gilles Gubelmann

Comings and goings at Paris's Haute Couture houses
Comings and goings at Paris's Haute Couture houses

France 24

time18 hours ago

  • France 24

Comings and goings at Paris's Haute Couture houses

Culture 11:42 From the show As the Haute Couture collections wrap up in the French capital, we take a look at some of the highlights in a season where arrivals and departures have cast a shadow over many of the major houses' collections. Fashion editor Samantha Tse talks us through a transitional collection for Chanel, as the label awaits the arrival of its new artistic director, Matthieu Blazy. Echoing the Met museum's glitzy annual gala, the Bal d'Eté in Paris brought together celebrities like Keira Knightley, Sofia Coppola, Penelope Cruz and Diane Kruger to raise funds for the Louvre's Decorative Arts Museum. We also discuss Demna Gvasalia's final show for Balenciaga, Glenn Marten's début at Margiela and Iris van Herpen's bio-luminescent creations as the Dutch designer stuns critics with innovative and delicate beauty once again.

The main moments of Paris Couture Week
The main moments of Paris Couture Week

France 24

time20 hours ago

  • France 24

The main moments of Paris Couture Week

AFP looks back on the key moments of the Autumn-Winter 2025-2026 season: New eras Demna bowed out at Balenciaga after a decade in charge with a show on Wednesday that drew the usual smattering of celebrities to the front rows but had some surprise models on the runway. Kim Kardashian channelled Elizabeth Taylor as she walked the room in a sultry slip dress, while veteran French actress Isabelle Huppert appeared in a turtleneck pulled up to her ears. Belgian Glenn Martens debuted at Maison Margiela the same day. Critics praised his bold first steps as a replacement for British design legend John Galliano, who stepped down in January. The New York Times called Martens' "Artisanal" collection, which included thrifted clothing, a "brilliant no-holds-barred debut" while Women's Wear Daily said it "tilted the Paris house in a dark, daring and DIY direction". Armani's absence One notably absentee was Giorgio Armani, 91, who had already cancelled his menswear show in Milan due to health reasons. He also missed the Paris Armani Prive show on doctors' orders. "In 20 years of Armani Prive, it's the first time I'm not in Paris," he said in a statement sent to AFP. "My doctors advised more rest, even though I felt ready." He added that he had "followed and overseen every aspect of the show remotely", stressing: "I approved and signed off on everything you will see." - Cardi B's couture - New York rapper Cardi B had a busy week in Paris and seemed intent on out-couturing many of the models. She appeared at the opening show of the week on Monday at Schiaparelli in a traffic-stopping tasselled neckpiece and posed with a crow perched on her hand outside the Petit Palais exhibition space. The next day, she turned heads at Stephane Rolland, with a sculptural black headpiece that surrounded her like a religious shroud. On Wednesday she was front row at Balenciaga. The rose trend Floral patterns were everywhere, with the rose especially dominant. Giambattista Valli adorned airy gowns with oversized fabric roses, Elie Saab featured them on princess-style dresses, while Armani Prive used pearl-embroidered roses. Balenciaga incorporated rose sequin prints into a skirt suit and Robert Wun showcased black-and-white roses on a structured strapless crinoline dress. Best of the rest Syrian designer Rami Al Ali made history as the first couturier from his country to take part in the official Paris calendar, choking back tears at the end of his show of exquisitely tailored pieces. Dutch duo Viktor & Rolf delivered a typically playful and sculptural spectacle, while Hong Kong's Robert Wun burnished his reputation further with some striking looks inspired by cinema and theatre. © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store