Brussels -
Belgium Travel guide,
Vacation,
Tourism
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Brussels - Belgium Travel guide
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From its breathtaking medieval centre to its
21st-century temple to
Surrealism, the new
Magritte Museum, Brussels offers the visitor a great deal more than just beer and chocolate and is resoundingly unlike its unfortunate staid image as the home of EU beaurocrats.
Indeed, Brussels is a creative, dynamic city. Its compact city centre is clustered with bars, restaurants and museums set along cobbled streets. Inevitably, most tourists head to the Grand-Place. With its ornate Flemish guild houses, impressive
Town Hall and buzzing atmosphere, it would be difficult to find a more beautiful square in the whole of
Europe. It deservedly is a
UNESCO World Heritage site and is the city's crowning jewel.
Wander next to the nearby
Royal and
Sablon districts teeming with art galleries and antique shops.
Throw away your map and meander down a myriad side streets,
discovering flea markets, art-deco houses and boutique stores.
Léopold II's Parisian-style boulevards (
Belliard and La Loi) are lined with embassies, banks and grand apartment buildings, while Sainte Cathérine, the
Art Nouveau district of St-Gilles and Ixelles draw an arty crowd with their eclectic shops and restaurants.
The Bruxellois take pride in their self-effacing, intellectual sense of humour, underpinned by a strong appreciation of the bizarre. The city has a long-running love affair with the
Surrealist art movement, pioneered by
René Magritte, and with classic comic strips, epitomised by
Hergé's boy hero,
Tintin. There's a telling irony in the fact that the city's best-known landmark is the Manneken-Pis, a tiny statuette of a urinating boy.
Meanwhile, all of this sits alongside world-class collections of art, fabulous cooking including mussels, frites, waffles and whelks, some of Europe's best and unique beers (literally, there are thousands of varieties), and master-chocolatiers. When it comes to this confectionary, it pays to ignore the well-known brands such as
Godiva or
Neuhaus, and seek out the stylish boutique of the trendiest 'chocolatier',
Pierre Marcolini who cnce a year, creates a limited-edition design.
The city's cultural calendar is packed with events for everyone from the massive, raucous Foire du Midi street fair every July teeming with stalls and fairground attractions to the legendary
Christmas Market that takes centre stage in the
Place Sainte Catherine with 240 stalls, a skating rink, a big wheel, and numerous rides. One of the biggest events is
Art Brussels, showcasing the city's edgier, creative side and a hub for art connoisseurs from around the globe.
If you're a Euro-loving national, check out the
European Quarter, centered around Schuman and the
Berlaymont. Its liveliest part is the
Place du Luxembourg: all its bars fill up around 6pm on week days with some of the 20,
000 diplomats, politicians and civil servants who reside in the city after Brussels became the centre of international political following
WWII.
Easily accessible by train from other major
European cities, Brussels is also the gateway for day trips to
Amsterdam,
Ghent,
Luxembourg,
Antwerp and Bruges, among others, making it a fabulous two-centre destination.
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- published: 14 Nov 2013
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