Driehuis is a village in the Dutch province of North Holland; part of the municipality of Velsen, it lies about 8 km north of Haarlem and 15 km west-northwest of Amsterdam.
The old estate was demolished in 1829 and the gardener's house was extended in chalet style in 1859 and 1869.
[4] The village is home to the Westerveld Cemetery [nl], a Dutch national heritage site.
[5] The ashes of Anthony Fokker were brought in 1940 to Westerveld Cemetery in Driehuis, where they were buried in the family grave.
Christine Buisman, the phytopathologist who discovered the cause of Dutch elm disease, is also buried in the cemetery.