Pl. De Brouckère 31, 1000 Bruxelles, Belgium
The Hotel Métropole is a five-star luxury hotel in central Brussels, Belgium. It was built in 1872–1874 in an eclectic style with neo-Renaissance and Louis XVI influences. The hotel opened in 1895 and was the only 19th-century hotel still in operation in Brussels.
The hotel
is located at 31, place de Brouckère/De Brouckèreplein, next to the Boulevard
Adolphe Max/Adolphe Maxlaan and the Northern Passage glazed shopping arcade, as
well as Brussels' busiest shopping street, the Rue Neuve/Nieuwstraat.
The hotel's
facade, in eclectic style with an Italian neo-Renaissance dominance, has three
levels and nine bays, crowned by an attic balustrade that was maintained during
the 19th-century transformation into the hotel, but was raised by two levels
under a mansard roof, as today. The current modern awning, originally in iron
and glass, spans the entire width of the facade and is rounded in a barrel
above the entrance.
The hotel's reception, lobby, and lounge are overtly ornate in an eclectic style of French Renaissance character, with Corinthian columns, rich furnishings, gilded details, and chandeliers, largely preserved in the state made by Chambon. Similarly, the hotel's eleven meetings and conference rooms are decorated in a neo-Renaissance style. The lobby is lit by a skylight, and still conserves its original elevator and main iron staircase.
Under the
reign of King Leopold II, following the covering of the river Senne, Brussels
was remodelled with large boulevards and green avenues. The then-mayor of the
City of Brussels, Jules Anspach, contributed to the transformation of the urban
landscape of the capital by the realisation of thoroughfares from the North
Station to the South Station, including from south to north and from west to
east: the Boulevard Maurice Lemonnier/Maurice Lemonnierlaan, the Boulevard
Anspach/Anspachlaan, the Boulevard Adolphe Max/Adolphe Maxlaan, and the
Boulevard Émile Jacqmain/Émile Jacqmainlaan.
In 1890,
Prosper and Edouard Wielemans, two brothers with a brewing company, opened the
Café Métropole on the Place de Brouckère/De Brouckèreplein—a major square on
the new boulevards—as a place to sell their beer. The café was a huge success,
and in 1891, the Wielemans-Ceuppens family purchased the next-door building, a
former property of the Caisse générale d'épargne et de retraite (ASLK/CGER),
and turned it into the Hotel Métropole, inaugurated in 1895. This main building
had been built in 1872–1874 by the architect Antoine Trappeniers. The hotel's
former reception desk is still easily recognisable today as the former bank's
desk, a significant historical and heritage glimpse of the past.
Following
their purchase, the Wielemans brothers commissioned the French architect Alban
Chambon, who was already responsible for the decoration of the Café Métropole,
to design a luxurious hotel of international class. Cambon called upon the best
artists and craftsmen of the time to assist him in his work. Nowadays,
Chambon's design is still a prominent feature of the heritage hotel, which is
considered an important historical landmark in the city. Not only was the Hotel
Métropole one of the first luxury hotels, it was also the first to have
electricity and central heating, and was until 2020 the only surviving 19th
century hotel in Brussels.
In the 20th
century, the hotel was enlarged by successive annexations of neighbouring
buildings to occupy almost the entire block between the Place de Brouckère, the
Rue Fossé aux Loups/Wolvengracht, the Rue Neuve/Nieuwstraat, and the Northern
Passage glazed shopping arcade, and split by the Impasse du Cheval/Paardgang.
The most remarkable extension was that of the 3000-seater Métropole Cinema,
carried out in Art Deco style by the architect Adrien Blomme and inaugurated in
1932, which included a projection room, a tavern, shops, a disco La Frégate and
two floors of supplementary hotel rooms with a patio above the cinema.
The Hotel
Métropole is famous for having hosted numerous national and international
events, including the first Solvay Conference on Physics and on Chemistry in
1911, which brought together personalities such as Einstein, Marie Curie and
Henri Poincaré. Moreover, it is the birthplace of the Black Russian cocktail,
which was created in 1949 by the barman Gustave Tops for the United States
ambassador to Luxembourg, Perle Mesta.
During the
Second World War's occupation of Belgium, the Hotel Métropole was requisitioned
by the Germans forces, then for a year by the Allied Forces. After the war, the
hotel experienced another golden era. Great statesmen, artists and entertainers
visiting Brussels all stayed at the hotel: Eisenhower, the General De Gaulle,
the Shah, Jacques Brel, Maurice Chevalier, to name a few. Toots Thielemans made
his debut in the jazz orchestra that played in the Café Métropole. Annie Cordy
also had her own suite in the hotel. In the second half of the 20th century,
the hotel underwent more renovation works. In 1985, Le Bar 19ème and the
restaurant L'Alban Chambon were opened. Ten years later, the hotel celebrated
its centenary.
Since 28
February 2002, the hotel's facade and ground floor, as well as the Belle Époque
elevator and ironwork, have been protected by the Monuments and Sites
Directorate of the Brussels-Capital Region. That same year, the restaurant was
completely renovated giving it an Italian Baroque décor.
Through the
years, the Metropole has offered his beautiful settings for the shooting of
many prestigious movies.
Among them
you find:
Les anges
gardiens, (France, 1994), Gerard Depardieu and Christian Clavier,
Le sang des
autres, (France-Canada, 1984), Jodie Foster and Lambert Wilson,
“Odette
tout le monde” (France) with Catherine Frot and Albert Dupontel.
“Je
l’aimais” (Belgium), with Daniel Auteuil and Marie-Josée Croze
“Villa
Amamia” (France, July 2008,) with Isabelle Huppert
“La guerre
continue” (France, July 2009) with Micheline Presle
“Hors La
Loi” France- Algeria Producer : Racid Bouchareb
Sources:
https://famoushotels.org/hotels/metropole-brussels
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotel_M%C3%A9tropole,_Brussels
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