6 Best Sights in Ixelles and Saint-Gilles, Brussels
We've compiled the best of the best in Ixelles and Saint-Gilles - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.
Hôtel Solvay
Having had its exterior restored to its original glory in late 2024, visitors can now fully soak up this relic of the Art Nouveau era. Part of a UNESCO World Heritage site spanning four town houses across the city designed by the architect Victor Horta, Solvay was built for a chemistry magnate in 1894, and it exhibits a wonderful mix of wooden flourishes and stained glass that was the calling card of its designer, and so reflective of Belgium's take on Art Nouveau. A 40-minute self-guided tour takes you through its creation.
Maison Hannon
Having opened its doors in 2023, this elegant town house was built in 1902 by Jules Brunfaut and remains a jewel of the era, mixing beaux arts and Art Nouveau styles. Exhibitions explore the art movements of the fin de siècle era, with a permanent exhibit on the Belgian Art Nouveau period. Look out for the themed guided tours on the first Thursday of the month.
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Musée Constantin Meunier
Nineteenth-century painter and sculptor Constantin Meunier (1831–1905) made his mark capturing the hardships of Belgian workers in a distinctive, realistic style. Examples of his work are displayed in his former house and studio.
Musée Wiertz
This workshop-museum began life in 1850 when the painter, sculptor, and writer Antoine Wiertz (1806--65) agreed to leave his collection to the Belgian government before his death. All the more surprising given he was a somewhat controversial figure, drawn to create huge canvases of often shocking subjects, from a naked woman staring down a skeleton, to gruesome accounts of Greek history, and the truly macabre Premature Burial, where a hand is seen clawing its way out of a coffin.
Porte de Hal
Built in 1381, this gate is a unique remnant of Brussels’s city walls, which tend to reappear in unusual places. (For example, if you continue down nearby rue Haute, you'll spy a huge chunk of wall next to the bowling alley at the crossroads with boulevard de l'Empereur.) In 1847, this gate became one of the first museums in Europe, though it lost its collections to the Cinquantenaire complex in the 1870s. It now has a permanent exhibition on medieval Brussels, and if you climb its 169 steps to the roof, a crenelated walkway affords sweeping views of the neighborhood.