Rue Belliard

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View of the Rue Belliard/Belliardstraat from the Rue de Trêves/Trierstraat
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Location within Brussels
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Rue Belliard (Belgium)
Location City of Brussels, Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium
Quarter Leopold Quarter
Coordinates 50°50′27″N04°22′34″E / 50.84083°N 4.37611°E / 50.84083; 4.37611

The Rue Belliard (French) or Belliardstraat (Dutch) is a major street in the European Quarter of Brussels, Belgium, running parallel to the Rue de la Loi/Wetstraat. Both are one-way streets; where traffic in the Rue de la Loi runs in the western direction towards Brussels' city centre, the Rue Belliard runs in the eastern direction, away from the city centre.

Contents

The street runs from the east of the Small Ring (Brussels' inner ring road) to the south-western corner of the Parc du Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark. The street has four lanes from the Small Ring to the start of the Belliard tunnel  [ nl ], two lanes along Leopold Park and ends on one lane up to the Cinquantenaire. The section on one lane from one park to the other is partly in the territory of the municipality of Etterbeek. The rest of the street is in the territory of the City of Brussels.

The Rue Belliard is named after Augustin Daniel Belliard, a French general who was governor of the department of the Dyle. [1]

Buildings

The Jacques Delors building, Rue Belliard
/Belliardstraat
99-101 Jacques Delors Building 01.jpg
The Jacques Delors building, Rue Belliard/Belliardstraat 99–101

The first part of the Rue Belliard (from the Avenue des Arts/Kunstlaan until the Rue van Maerlant/Van Maerlantstraat) was opened in 1855, while the second part of the street (until the Cinquantenaire) was finished in 1869. [1]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 "Rue Belliard – Inventaire du patrimoine architectural". monument.heritage.brussels (in French). Retrieved 4 November 2023.