Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1

154 BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG REGION BY REGION


Antwerp’s steel-and-glass Centraal Station, a monument to the railroad era


A DOG OF FLANDERS
The suburb of Hoboken is the setting for the
children’s book A Dog of Flanders, which is
most popular in Japan. It was written by the
British author Marie Louise de la Ramée (1839–
1908), an animal rights activist and literary figure,
under the pen-name Ouida. Inspired by a visit
to Antwerp in 1871, the story is of an orphaned
boy, Nello, and his dog Patrasche, who take a
milk cart into Antwerp each day. A series of
tragic events leads to their deaths in front of
Rubens’s Descent from the Cross in Onze-Lieve-
Vrouwekathedraal. Fans travel from Japan to
visit the bronze statue of these two figures
at Kapelstraat 3, Hoboken, and the com-
memorative bench by the cathedral.

Statue of Nello
and Patrasche

P Centraal Station
Koningin Astridplein. # daily.
Antwerp’s main railway station
is a monumentally grand build-
ing designed in extravagant
Neo-Classical style by the well
known Bruges architect Louis
Delacenserie, and built over
seven years, between 1898
and 1905. With its grand stair-
cases, columns, marble and
gold decorative flourishes,
Antwerp’s palatial station
speaks of a bygone age,
when rail was considered the
king of luxury travel.


There are a number of interesting suburbs that lie
outside the historic hub of Antwerp. To the east is the
magnificent Centraal Station, surrounded by the surpris-
ingly unglamorous Diamond District – centre of Europe’s
biggest international diamond trade – whose streets are
lined with diamond outlets. Further south, the suburb
of Zurenborg, in Berchem, has some of Europe’s most
exuberant mansions, created in a wide variety of styles
for Antwerp’s wealthy merchant classes. The eastern
suburb of Deurne has a silver museum, set in a charm-
ing castle, while to the south, Middelheim contains
an outdoor sculpture museum of exceptional quality.


Antwerp: Beyond the Centre


E Diamond Museum
Koningin Astridplein 19–23.
Tel (03) 2024890. # 10am–5:30pm
Thu–Tue. ¢ Jan. & =
This interesting museum is
dedicated to the world of dia-
monds and includes treasure
chambers as well as multime-
dia exhibits highlighting the
processes used to extract and
cut the precious stone. On
most weekdays, visitors can


E Sterckshof Museum
Hoofvunderlei 160. Tel (03) 3605252.
# 10am–5:30pm Tue–Sun. ¢ 1 &
2 Jan, 25 Dec. 0 http://www.provant.be
The castle of Sterckshof takes
its name from the 16th-century
banker and merchant Gerard
Sterck, advisor to Emperor
Charles V. With its multiple
red-brick turrets and court-
yards, moat and peaceful gar-
dens, it offers a vivid insight
into palatial buildings of that
age, although, after a long
history of ruin, this is in fact
a 20th-century reconstruc tion.
Inside is a fine collection of
Belgian wares (silver and
pewter) dating from the 16th
century to modern times.
There are also choice pieces
of antique furniture, all beau-
tifully presented, along with
exhibits and demons trations
showing how silver is made.

E Middleheimmuseum
Middelheimlaan 61. Tel (03)



  1. Tue–Sun. 9 7


    http://museum.antwerpen.be
    The extensive, wooded park
    of the Middelheimmuseum




For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp266–7 and pp292–4


watch a diamond-cutter
demonstrate his craft in one
of the museum’s work shops.

(or the Openluchtmuseum
voor Beelhouwkunst) pro-
vides a sympathetic setting
for about 300 sculp tures
from the 19th century to the
pre sent. It has works by Rik
Wouters, Georges Minne,
Constantin Meunier, Juan
Muñoz, Barbara Hepworth,
Rodin, Panamarenko and
many others. The open
spaces and their relation-
ships with neighbouring
pieces seem to allow the
sculptures to breathe and
to show off their three-
dimensionality. This museum
can also be seen as the
apogee of an admirable
policy of dec orating public
spaces with con temporary
sculpture, which can be
seen all over Belgium.
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