City layout

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Also known as: Brussel, Bruxelles
Flemish:
Brussel
French:
Bruxelles

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The historic Old Town of inner Brussels forms the centre of the modern metropolis, but the pentagonal walls that once surrounded it were replaced by a ring of tree-lined boulevards in the early 19th century. Since 1830, when Belgium became an independent kingdom, Brussels has continued to be transformed, in the Old Town as well as in the surrounding communes. The determining factor in this metamorphosis has been incessant population pressure, which caused a building boom and the development of an ever-widening network of streets, avenues, and roads crisscrossing the countryside and urbanizing the neighbouring villages.

At first the urban tentacles pushed forward only along the seven or eight routes radiating from the tollgates along the old city walls, but after the toll system was abolished in 1860, they also spread along new roads. The suburbs expanded rapidly beyond the town gates, and by the end of the 19th century several of the first ring of communes were almost completely covered by residential buildings. Much like Paris, which was radically redesigned in the second half of the 19th century by the urban planner Georges-Eugène, Baron Haussmann, Brussels of this period was physically transformed. Influenced by French urban planning and architecture, Brussels’s authorities demolished medieval and Baroque-era neighbourhoods, created new beaux quartiers (“beautiful districts”), and cut wide boulevards through the city—diminishing its historically Flemish character. Modernization also brought improved sanitation to the city. In the 1860s and ’70s the highly polluted Senne was diverted around the western edge of the historic city. Its traditional course through the city centre was integrated into a new system of sewers and covered over with apartment-lined boulevards.

Expansion continued into the 20th century, in all directions: north and south along the valley of the Senne River, and east and west on the undulating plateaus separated by tributaries of the Senne. But as affluent, mainly French-speaking people increasingly moved into leafy communities on Brussels’s periphery, many Flemish speakers viewed the metropolitan growth as an incursion into their territory. Thus, in the latter half of the 20th century, legislation strictly confined the city within the limits of its 19 constituent communes.

Historically split by topography into a riverside merchant district and an elevated elite area to the east, central Brussels today remains divided between the western commercial quarter, or lower town, and the eastern upper town, where the principal government buildings are situated. The commercial quarter extends from the western outer boulevards to a little east of the central boulevards and includes the medieval marketplace known as the Grand’ Place (Flemish: Grote Markt), the city’s premier architectural tourist attraction. This square, with its elaborately decorated 17th-century guildhalls, lies at the heart of the Old Town. It is occupied on its south side by the imposing Town Hall (French: Hôtel de Ville; Flemish: Stadhuis) and on its north by the ornate King’s House (Maison du Roi/Broodhuis; almost entirely rebuilt during 1873–95), which contains the Brussels City Museum. The area surrounding the Grand’ Place, known as the Îlot Sacré (“Sacred Isle”), includes the late 19th-century Stock Exchange. Perhaps the most famous curiosity of this quarter is the Manneken-Pis Fountain (1619), noted for a small bronze statue of a boy urinating and known to the people of Brussels as their oldest “citizen”; the statue is adorned in various costumes throughout the year to mark festivals, holidays, and other events. Other highlights of the lower town include two preserved 18th-century squares, the Place du Nouveau Marché aux Grains (Nieuwe Graanmarkt) and the Place des Martyrs (Martelaarsplein), located northwest and northeast of the Grand’ Place, respectively.

The upper town is the remaining eastern area of the inner city. On the rue Royale (Koningsstraat) stand the Royal Palace and, to the north, the Palace of the Nation. The Royal Palace is flanked to the west by the late 18th-century Place Royale, a symmetrical Neoclassical square conceived by French architects Nicolas Barré and Barnabé Guimard to evoke the royal squares of France. The Palace of the Nation was erected (1779–83) when Belgium belonged to the Austrian Netherlands; after independence it became the home of the Belgian Senate and Chamber of Representatives. The two palaces stand at either end of Brussels Park, in an area that has become a symbol for the national government. North of the Palace of the Nation, and dominating the northeastern end of the historic city, is the Cité Administrative, built between the late 1950s and early ’80s and originally intended for national government functions. The complex’s austere international style drew much criticism, however, and its buildings were largely abandoned by the early 21st century. At that time, in a public-private venture, Brussels made plans to transform the Cité Administrative from an obsolete modernist monument into a mixed-use complex featuring renovated offices, expanded green space, recreational facilities, and a substantial amount of housing, thus reintegrating the site into city life.

The headquartering of the European Communities in Brussels in 1958 breathed new life into the city centre, especially east of Brussels Park in the Léopold Quarter, where the offices were established. The first large-scale building dedicated to the city’s European functions was the European Commission’s headquarters, the Berlaymont—a vast cruciform high-rise building designed by Lucien de Vestel and constructed during 1967–69. The Berlaymont (or “Berlaymonster,” as its critics call it) has become an icon of European integration. Although the expansion of the European quarter has provoked controversy, as it necessitated the demolition of architecturally important Neoclassical streetscapes, the EU infrastructure now encompasses dozens of buildings and reinforces Brussels’s identity as the capital of Europe.

People

The population of the Brussels agglomeration grew steadily from 57,000 in 1755, when the first census was held, to 104,000 in 1830, 626,000 in 1900, 892,000 in 1930, and approximately 1,000,000 in 1970. The population of the Brussels-Capital Region remained just above 1,000,000 into the early 21st century, when it represented about one-tenth of the population of Belgium. Meanwhile, the population of the inner city increased in line with that of the total agglomeration until about 1890, when it stood at 160,000. It then decreased sharply during the first half of the 20th century, falling to about 60,000 by the 1960s. By the early 21st century, however, the population of the Brussels commune had reached nearly three times that number.

Immigration has had a significant impact on the demographic and linguistic evolution of the city. In the 19th century, newcomers usually came from either Flanders or Wallonia, although there was also a large expatriate community from France and, to a lesser extent, Germany. Until then, Brussels remained the Flemish city it had always been, with only about one-third of its inhabitants speaking French. The new Flemish inhabitants, however, belonged on the whole to the lower strata of society (domestic servants, labourers), whereas Walloon newcomers were predominantly middle-class employees and civil servants. Largely as a result of social pressure and the prestige of the language, by the mid-20th century a large majority of Bruxellois spoke French.

The economic expansion of the post-World War II era necessitated the introduction of labourers from a number of countries in the Mediterranean region—including Italy, Spain, Greece, Morocco, Turkey, and Yugoslavia—during the 1950s and ’60s. Immigrants of various origins, notably the Democratic Republic of the Congo, continued to arrive in subsequent decades. Significant numbers of immigrants from outside western Europe and their descendants now inhabit central Brussels, notably in the communes of Molenbeek-Saint-Jean (Flemish: Sint-Jans-Molenbeek), Saint-Gilles (Sint-Gillis), Schaerbeek (Schaarbeek), and Saint-Josse-ten-Noode (Sint-Joost-ten-Node). All these immigrant groups brought increased ethnic and religious diversity to the historically Roman Catholic city. Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, for example, boasts an important Turkish community, and Schaerbeek has a relatively large number of mosques and several Eastern Orthodox churches. Geographic segregation, economic disparity, and, on the part of some groups, a lack of assimilation into Belgian society occasionally have contributed to tensions between immigrant groups and the native Belgian population.

Meanwhile, the arrival from western European countries of personnel for the European Communities and, later, the EU also altered the composition of the population of Brussels. By the turn of the 21st century, more than one-fourth of the inhabitants of the Brussels-Capital Region had been born outside Belgium, and the majority of them hailed from other EU countries. Many European functionaries have settled in affluent areas within the Brussels-Capital Region, especially in the communes of Ixelles (Flemish: Elsene), Etterbeek, Woluwe-Saint-Lambert (Sint-Lambrechts-Woluwe), and Woluwe-Saint-Pierre (Sint-Pieters-Woluwe). Many others have moved into municipalities on its periphery, such as Sint-Genesius-Rode (French: Rhode-Saint-Genèse) and Tervueren, both within the Flemish Region, and Waterloo, in Wallonia. A number of these peripheral communes are classified as “communes with facilities” (French: communes à facilités; Flemish: faciliteitengemeenten), meaning that the Belgian constitution grants their residents the right to access government services in a minority language, notwithstanding the official language of the commune. Thus, even though the borders of the Brussels-Capital Region are fixed, those limits have not constrained its largely French- and English-speaking international population, whose settlement in the Flemish hinterland has contributed to rancor between the country’s language communities.

While Brussels remains officially bilingual—and the dual capital of the country’s Flemish- and French-speaking communities—French is undoubtedly the lingua franca of the region, with more than nine-tenths of the population speaking it “well to fluently” in the early 21st century. As the use of Flemish has declined, English has overtaken it as the most common second language of the people of Brussels, with more than one-third of the population making that claim—although the use of English is associated with school and the workplace, rather than the home.