The Place du Luxembourg (French) or Luxemburgplein (Dutch), meaning "Luxembourg Square", is a square in the European Quarter of Brussels, Belgium.[1] It is better known by local European bureaucrats and journalists by one of its nicknames, Place Lux or Plux.[2]
Place Lux / Plux | |
Location | Ixelles and City of Brussels, Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium |
---|---|
Quarter | Leopold Quarter |
Coordinates | 50°50′21″N 4°22′22″E / 50.83919°N 4.37266°E |
Construction | |
Completion | c. 1861 |
The square is mostly located in the municipality of Ixelles, with a small part in the City of Brussels, between the Rue d'Arlon/Aarlenstraat and the Rue du Luxembourg/Luxemburgstraat. In its centre stands the Monument to John Cockerill. It is also flanked by the European Parliament, as well as some of the main European Institutions in the city. It is served by Brussels-Luxembourg railway station.
History
editEarly history
editThe Place du Luxembourg/Luxemburgplein was a central feature of the Leopold Quarter, a neighbourhood developed in the first few decades after the Belgian Revolution, and the most prestigious residential area in the capital for the bulk of the 19th century. The district had been designed in 1838 by the architect Tilman-Francois Suys, but the original design did not include provisions for a train station.
When the new Leopold Quarter railway station was built in 1854–55, the architect Antoine Trappeniers was commissioned to draw up plans for a large public square leading to the station. The Rue de Luxembourg/Luxemburgstraat was then in an embryonic state, and the square was created as its end point. The square was designed in a neoclassical style and to be as symmetrical as possible. Construction was carried out primarily between 1855 and 1861. Due to its proximity to the station, the square was popular among merchants, as well as restaurant and café owners. One house on the corner of the Rue d'Arlon/Aarlenstraat was, at one time, the home of Auguste Beernaert, Prime Minister from 1884 to 1894.[3][4]
During the 19th century, the station was divided into sections to differentiate the three different classes of travel. The station was extended in 1899 and 1921 with single storey pavilions, which were then amalgamated in 1934, when the façade was standardised.[1]
1980s to present
editThe station was the square's central feature for much of its existence. However, with the construction of the Espace Léopold (which now houses the European Parliament) starting in 1989, the square's character changed significantly. Designs changed frequently, amidst much legal and political wrangling, but ultimately the tracks of the previously open air station were covered over by the flagstone mall that is now seen outside the European Parliament. The bulk of the station building itself was torn down in 2004, and rebuilt underground, leaving only the central entrance, which now serves as an information office. By 2008, the Parliamentary complex was complete.[3]
Residents' associations and cultural heritage promoters have been critical of many aspects of the Parliament's construction and the train station's redesign. Some believe that the scale of the complex is simply too large for the area and that efforts have not been adequate to integrate it with its largely neoclassical surroundings. While many have praised the originality and professionalism of the buildings' design, it has also faced criticism for being too large, cold, and remote.[5]
In recent years, the Place du Luxembourg has become a hotspot for after-work nightlife activity in the European Quarter, primarily on Thursday and Friday nights.[4] The square is colloquially known as Place Lux or Plux by local European bureaucrats and journalists. The trash left on the square by the Thursday night revellers has become an irritant for local residents,[4] and Brussels politicians have threatened to shut down the party.[6]
In 2024, the square became the site of a farmers' protest that happened in front of the European Parliament, during which the John Cockerill Monument was vandalised.[7][8]
Layout
editThe Place du Luxembourg largely consists of restaurants and bars that dominate the wide pavements, with some banks and other retail services, serving the civil servants and members of the neighbouring European Parliament, as well as the other European Institutions and associated organisations, which are mostly located close by.[9]
In the centre of the square is the Monument to John Cockerill, a prominent British-Belgian 19th-century industrialist, by the sculptor Armand Cattier , which is a near copy of the statue outside Seraing's Town Hall in Liège Province (Wallonia).[10] The figure of Cockerill is leaning on an anvil and is surrounded by industrial figures from that period: a glass-blower or blacksmith, a mechanic, a puddler and a coal miner.[11] On the front of the pedestal is the inscription "To John Cockerill, the father of workers". The base of the pedestal reads Cockerill's motto, "Intelligence" and "Work", as well as "1790-1840", Cockerill's dates of birth and death.[1]
Directly behind the monument on the eastern side is the square's principle structure. The former entrance to Leopold Quarter railway station (now the subterranean Brussels-Luxembourg railway station with its entrance moved east) is a listed building and was taken over by the European Parliament and Belgian authorities as a joint information office and museum.[1] It now houses the Parliament's "infopoint".
The building forms part of the Parliament's Espace Léopold[1] (the complex of Parliamentary buildings in Brussels) along with two new buildings on either side, which border the square. The whole complex of Parliamentary buildings dominate the eastern view of the square, with the dome of the Parliament's Paul-Henri Spaak building mirroring the clock at the top of the station's façade, creating a popular shot of the Parliament from the square.[4] Openings on each side of the old station building lead directly to the Esplanade of the European Parliament, the pedestrian mall running the length of the Parliament.
- Map of the square
AXA | ~Rue d'Arlon | Fortis | Ralph's Bar | Le Pullman | The Grapevine | Coco | Quarter Leopold | Le London | EXKi | ~Rue de Trêves | EP |
Tout Bon | |||||||||||
~Rue de Luxembourg | |||||||||||
NER | |||||||||||
Shop'n go | |||||||||||
Marie Haps | Swiss representation | EPPA SA | Ketje | Fat Boy's | The Beer Factory |
Future
editIn plans to rebuild parts of the European Quarter, the Place du Luxembourg would become one of three main pedestrian squares, each focusing on a different theme. Due to its proximity to the European Parliament, the Place du Luxembourg would focus on citizens.[12] Also planned is the potential clearing of space between the Rue d'Arlon/Aarlenstraat and the Rue de Trêves/Trierstraat for a new square,[12] possibly as a long extension of the Place du Luxembourg creating a vast boulevard-like public space.[13] The Brussels transportation authority, STIB/MIVB, has provisional plans to build a metro extension with a stop on the square at Brussels-Luxembourg railway station.[14] In 2011, plans were announced in partnership between the municipality of Ixelles and the Parliament to try to reduce the "mess" left by revellers on busy nights, which the local authority deemed to be "totally unacceptable."[9]
See also
editReferences
editCitations
edit- ^ a b c d e Demey 2007, p. 423–425.
- ^ "Place Lux blijft leeg op donderdag: 'Niet de leukste plaats om aan een tafeltje te zitten'". www.bruzz.be (in Dutch). Retrieved 26 March 2021.
- ^ a b Demey 2007, p. 49–57.
- ^ a b c d e f Gérard 2023, p. 60.
- ^ Demey 2007, p. 377–378.
- ^ Keating, Dave (13 June 2013). "Not the place to be". European Voice. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
- ^ Smith, Benedict; Barnes, Joe; Samuel, Henry (1 February 2024). "'Technocratic EU does not respect farmers', says union boss". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
- ^ Times, The Brussels. "Farmers topple statue from John Cockerill monument in Place du Luxembourg". www.brusselstimes.com. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
- ^ a b Banks, Martin. "EU parliament targeted in clean-up campaign". The Parliament.com. Retrieved 4 July 2011.
- ^ Goodwin, Gordon (1887). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. p. 200. .
- ^ "John Cockerill". Brussels Remembers. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
- ^ a b Clerbaux, Bruno. "The European Quarter today: Assessment and prospects" (PDF). European Council of Spatial Planners. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 April 2008. Retrieved 9 December 2007.
- ^ "Bruxelles et l'UE prépare un grand lifting pour la rue de la Loi" [Brussels and the EU prepare a major facelift for rue de la Loi]. 7sur7.be (in French). Belgium. 5 September 2007. Archived from the original on 9 July 2024. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
- ^ "STIB 2020 Plan: Étendre le réseau de manière à mieux couvrir la demande (pdf)" (PDF) (in French). 2004.
Bibliography
edit- Demey, Thierry (2007). Brussels, capital of Europe. S. Strange (trans.). Brussels: Badeaux. ISBN 978-2-9600414-6-0.
- Gérard, Hervé (2023). Bruxelles et ses places (in French). Brussels: 180° éditions. ISBN 978-2-940721-32-0.
External links
edit- Media related to Place du Luxembourg/Luxemburgplein at Wikimedia Commons