Galeries Royales Saint Hubert Brussels Bruxelles Belgium The Sint-Hubertusgalerij shopping


The Sint-Hubertusgalerij (French: Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert) (also known as Koninginnegalerij; French: Galerie de la Reine) in Brussels is a glazed shopping arcade that preceded the more famous Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan and The Passage in St Petersburg. Like them it has twin regular façades with distant origins in Vasari's long narrow street-like courtyard of the Uffizi, Florence, with glazed arcaded shopfronts separated by pilasters and two upper floors, all in an Italianate Cinquecento style, under a lightly arched glass-paned roof with a delicate cast-iron framework. It was build by a young architect, Jean-Pierre Cluysenaer, born in Holland in 1811, who determined to sweep away a warren of ill-lit alleyways between the Grasmarkt (Marché aux Herbes) and the Kruidtuinberg (Montagne aux Herbes Potagères) and replace a sordid space where the bourgeoisie scarce ventured to enter with a covered shopping arcade more than 200 m in length. His idea, conceived in 1836, was finally authorized in February 1845. The partnership "Société des Galeries Saint-Hubert", in which the banker Jean-André Demot took an interest, was established by the summer, but nine years were required to disentangle all the property rights, assembled by rights of eminent domain, during a process that caused one property owner to die of a stroke and a barber, it was said, slit his throat as the adjacent house came down. Construction started on May 6, 1846. It lasted for 18 months, and the 213 m passage was inaugurated on June 20, 1847 by King Léopold and his two sons. In 1845 the Société named the three sections of the new passage the Galerie du Roi, Galerie de la Reine and Galerie du Prince. The ensemble, called the Passage Saint-Hubert has borne its present name since 1965. Brussels Bruxelles Brussel, Brüssel, pronounced is the capital of Belgium and as it is the headquarters of most of the European Union's institutions, is considered the de facto capital of Europe. Brussels is t


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