Window prostitution is a form of
prostitution that is fairly common in the
Netherlands and surrounding countries.[1] The
prostitute rents a window plus workspace off a window operator for a certain period of time, often per day or part of a day.[2][3][4] The prostitute is also independent and recruits her own customers and also negotiates the price and the services to be provided.[2][3][4]
Dutch practices
Window prostitution was originally a typical Dutch form of prostitution.[1] This form arose through the ban on soliciting on the street or in doorways in the old
red-light district in
Amsterdam around the old church.[5] In the beginning the curtains were completely closed, as sexual morality became less strict, the curtains opened even further. When the curtains were completely open, the process continued in the form of fewer and fewer pieces of clothing that the prostitute wore. In current times, the curtains are only closed when the prostitute has a customer.[2][3]
There are around 1,270 windows used for prostitution in the Netherlands.[6] In Amsterdam the traditional window prostitution neighbourhoods are the
red-light district, the area around the
Singel and the Ruysdaelkade.[5] In
Rotterdam window prostitution has not been tolerated since the seventies.[1][7] In
The Hague it occurs in the Hunsestraat, the Geleenstraat and the Doubletstraat.[8] In
Alkmaar there is a tolerance area for windows on the
Achterdam.[9] In
Arnhem the Spijkerkwartier was the red-light district, but it was closed in January 2006.[10] In
Utrecht there was a special form of window prostitution from the 1960s: the women were sitting behind the windows of
houseboats moored along the Zandpad, a road along the eastern bank of the
Vecht river.[11][4] In July 2013, the municipal authorities withdrew the permits.[4][12]
Thirty percent of prostitutes in the Netherlands work behind windows.[13]
Duisburg,[22] Cologne[18] and Frankfurt am Main[18] contain Eroscenters or Laufhäuser where the women work within a building behind a window, often large buildings of more than 6 floors. Both forms are present in Hamburg.[18]
Geneva - Les Pâquis, Pâquis’ four sex centres - the only places in Geneva where the women sit behind windows
South Korea
Cheongnyangni 588,
Seoul - Windows were fitted in the red-light district in a government-backed improvement scheme ahead of the
1988 Summer Olympics.[24] The district was closed for re-development in 2016.[25]
References
^
abcDi Nicola, Andrea; Cauduro, Andrea; Lombardi, Marco; Ruspini, Paolo, eds. (2009). Prostitution and Human Trafficking: Focus on Clients. Springer-Verlag New York.
ISBN978-0-387-73628-0.