Wenduine is served by the Kusttram (Coastal tram) which traverses the entire Belgian coast.
History A Gallo-Roman settlement was discovered in this area, but this habitation disappeared around 270 after raids by Germanic pirates and flooding of the coastal plain.
The first reclamations took place in the 10th century and, in addition to Wenduine, the villages of Vlissegem and Klemskerke also emerged.
In the 13th and 14th centuries, Wenduine was important as a fishing town, in 1335 there was already a port, and in 1340 fishermen were allowed to catch porpoise.
Villages such as Tarninge and Mosselinge disappeared either due to floods or drifting sand.
It was then that Wenduine really became accessible, because the steam tram line Ostend-Bredene (village)-Den Haan-Wenduine-Blankenberge then started running.
From 1902 onwards, an urbanization plan was implemented, in which a central roundabout was constructed, the Astridplein, today with tennis and mini golf.
From a fashionable seaside resort it became more of a holiday destination for wider sections of the population.
Nature and landscape Wenduine is located on the Belgian North Sea coast.