Namur Gate
Namur Gate | |
---|---|
Porte de Namur/Naamsepoort | |
Part of Second City Walls of Brussels | |
Brussels, Belgium | |
The Namur Gate at the end of the 18th century | |
Type | City gate |
Site history | |
Built | 14th century |
Materials | stone |
Demolished | 1784 |
The Namur Gate (French: Porte de Namur, Dutch: Naamsepoort) was one of the gates of the second walls of Brussels. The 21st century Porte de Namur/Naamsepoort denotes rather the Ixelles district of that name, than the disappeared building.
History
The gate used to be called the New Gate of Coudenberg (Dutch: Nieuwe Coudenbergse Poort), to distinguish it from the old gate located in the first walls, and it used to connect Rue Entre deux Portes/Twee Poortenstraat (current Rue de Namur/Naamsestraat) to Chemin d'Ixelles (current Chaussée d'Ixelles/Elsense Steenweg).
During the construction of the boulevards of the small ring, two neoclassical former pavilions of octroi were raised there by the architect Auguste Payen (collaborator of Nicolas Roget, architect of the City of Brussels) in 1836. The octroi was abolished in 1860, the buildings were moved to the entrance of the Bois de la Cambre three years later. Removing barriers then permitted the Porte de Namur/Naamsepoort area to develop.
In 1866, the pavilions were replaced by the monumental Brouckère fountain, designed by the architect Henri Beyaert and by the two sculptors Pierre Dunion and Edouard Fiers, which was raised in memory of Burgomaster Charles de Brouckère. The monument was dismantled in 1955 to allow the rearrangement of boulevards in preparation for Expo 58.[1]
Nowadays, the Namur Gate area offers a blend of luxury shops, fast food restaurants and entertainment venues.
References
- ^ Michel Hainaut & Philippe Bovy, À la découverte de l'histoire d'Ixelles : Porte de Namur. Ixelles, April 2000, 16 p.