The Hôtel Solvay is a large Art Nouveau town house designed by Victor Horta on the Avenue Louise in Brussels. The house was commissioned by Armand Solvay, the son of the wealthy Belgian chemist and industrialist Ernest Solvay. For this wealthy patron Horta could spend a fortune on precious materials and expensive details. Horta designed every single detail; furniture, carpets, light fittings, tableware and even the door bell. He used expensive materials such as marble, onyx, bronze, tropic woods etc. For the decoration of the staircase Horta cooperated with the Belgian pointillist painter Théo van Rysselberghe. The Hôtel Solvay and most of its splendid content remained intact thanks to the Wittamer family. They acquired the house in the 1950s and did the utmost to preserve and restore this magnificent dwelling. The house is still private property and can only be visited by appointment and under very strict conditions. The edifice is on the UNESCO World Heritage List.AwardsThe UNESCO commission recognized the Hôtel Solvay as UNESCO World Heritage in 2000 as one of the Major Town Houses of the Architect Victor Horta.
"Inscrit au Patrimoine mondial par l'UNESCO, L'hôtel Solvay est unanimement reconnu comme l'oeuvre majeure de l'architecte Victor Horta.En 1894, Armand Solvay, fils de l'industriel Ernest Solvay, enthousiasmé par l'Art Nouveau confie à Victor Horta la réalisation de sa maison familiale Avenue Louise, à Bruxelles."Voeg deze kaart toe aan uw website;
We gebruiken cookies en andere trackingtechnologieën om uw browse-ervaring op onze website te verbeteren, om u gepersonaliseerde inhoud en gerichte advertenties te laten zien, om ons websiteverkeer te analyseren en om te begrijpen waar onze bezoekers vandaan komen. Privacybeleid