The cultural heritage institutions in the Netherlands have traditionally taken a dim view of the reconstruction of heritage buildings when most or all of the material substance has been lost. Recent discussions about, for example, the listed status of the reconstructed mill at Burum (destroyed by fire in 2012) or the possible reconstruction of the nineteenth-century attic of Artis’s Ledenlokalen (damaged during World War II) illustrate that the guiding principles of the institutional heritage sector do not seem to meet the actual challenges arising from the quest for reconstruction. There is a need for in-depth investigations and theoretical reflections on this topic, yet these are rare at present in the Netherlands. Hence this article take...