The general war memorial is a cross made of white marble and Corten steel next to a stone plaque affixed to a Corten steel wall, bearing the names of Second World War victims.
The monument of the Dutch Tramway Company (NTM) bears the names of employees who were killed on their trams during air raids, in reprisals and in other acts of war.
The Gypsy monument, made of Belgian bluestone, depicts a caravan with a break in the middle. Carved into this break are the names of seven members of a Roma family who were arrested, deported and murdered on 16 May 1944.
The Jewish monument consists of fourteen columns of varying lengths that are roughly cut off at the top, symbolising lives that were brutally cut short. The names of fourteen Jewish victims are inscribed on the columns.
The KNIL monument commemorates the soldiers who served in the Royal Dutch East Indies Army, which was active in the former Dutch East Indies from 1814 to 1950. The monument bears the names of eleven deceased Moluccan soldiers, soldiers from Moluccas, a group of Indonesian Islands.
The Veterans' Monument stands for those who gave, served and still bear the burden of their commitment to peace and freedom.
Memorial tiles on a so-called meeldraad (stamen) bear the names of victims of the Second World War who were not mentioned on the general monument at the time.