The imposing platform and track canopies of The Hague Hollands Spoor station have been restored to their historical colors. Commissioned by ProRail, Ruland Architecten, together with 4Infra, supervised and elaborated the historical color research conducted by Stichting Restauratie Atelier Limburg.
Another point of luck was the exclusion of the small canopy on platform 1 in the renovations. A long history of colors emerged on the columns of this canopy. The discovered colors have been plotted on a timeline. The oldest color on the steel sections above the central platform from 1888 is a brown shade, while the oldest layer of paint on the canopy from 1907 is a green shade. Because the entire ensemble was completed in 1907 and painted green as a whole at that time, Ruland Architecten chose to restore this shade of green.


The monumental and architectural values of the station complex have been enhanced. Materials and colors are once again in harmony. The main building, the platform buildings, and the various roofs of the roof complex form a unified whole once more.


| Location | Railway Station The Hague Hollands Spoor |
| Client | ProRail |
| Floor area | ca. 10.000 m2 gross floor area |
| Year | 2023-2026 |
| Status | Finished |
| Architect | Ruland Architecten, Amsterdam |
| Historical color research | Stichting Restauratie Atelier Limburg |
| Engineering firm | 4Infra |
| Contractor | Hermans SSB |
| Images | Shane van Hattum, Duckdev. Ruland Architecten |









