The Palace of Justice or Law Courts of Brussels is the most important court building in Belgium.It was built between 1866 and 1883 in the eclectic style by the celebrated architect Joseph Poelaert. The total cost of the construction, land and furnishings was somewhere in the region of 45 million Belgian francs. It is reputed to be the largest building constructed in the 19th century. It is a notable landmark of Brussels.HistoryInceptionIn 1860, during the reign of Leopold I, a Royal decree announced the building of the Palace of Justice and an international architecture contest was organised for its design. The designs entered in the contest were found to be unacceptable and were thus rejected. The then minister of justice Tesch appointed Joseph Poelaert to design the building in 1861. The first stone was laid on October 31, 1866, and the building was inaugurated on October 15, 1883, four years after Poelaert's death in 1879.For the building of the Palace of Justice, a section of the Marollen neighbourhood was demolished, while most of the park belonging to the House of Mérode was also expropriated. The 75 landlord owners of the houses, many of whom lived in their homes, received large indemnities, while the other inhabitants, about a hundred, were also forced to move by the Belgian government, though they were compensated with houses in the garden city "Tillens-Roosendael" (cité-jardin Tillens-Roosendael) in the municipality of Uccle, in the Quartier du Chat.
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