Brussels?

SimonSawSunlight

Simon Fabel
Local time
11:16 AM
Joined
Mar 7, 2008
Messages
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i'm helping my parents move from berlin to the beautiful canton de vaud in switzerland. i'm flying back the day after my birthday (flying in on the evening of the 5th of july), and as a birthday present i get to spend 24 hours in the nice city of brussels. meet me at the bar!
 
Likewise, it's about 2.5 hrs drive each way for me, and I have a full day planned plus a business trip to Frankfurt the next day. Sorry.

Surely though, we must have members closer to the Grand Place, no?

Enjoy the trip!
Rob
 
Sadly, I have to work the 5th and the 6th.
Would have been nice to welcome a fellow forumite to my barrio.

From the photo's I've seen of yours, (good work, by the way) I think you'll be happiest where people congregate.
The rue Neuve is the middle class shopping street, Louise is where affluent people shop. You'll find the african quarter near the Porte de Namur - it's called Matongé.
Of the central pentagon that forms the old town, the west and north is more upscale, peppered with government buildings, embassies and office buildings, the south and east is more popular, poorer, more diverse. You'll hear little french and even less flemish, lots of moroccan, turkish, polish, and in the centre of town, the eurocracy goes to ball, and you'll hear everything from danish to greek, from german to spanish, and never forget the italians.
At the Place du Jeu de Balle, there is a second-hand market every morning of the week.
There used to be a forlorn russian there, half hiding between the stalls with a plastic bag full of zorki's and feds.

I won't go on. Have a nice day in my hometown, don't start drinking the beer too early, it can be treacherous.
 
Sadly, I have to work the 5th and the 6th.
Would have been nice to welcome a fellow forumite to my barrio.

From the photo's I've seen of yours, (good work, by the way) I think you'll be happiest where people congregate.
The rue Neuve is the middle class shopping street, Louise is where affluent people shop. You'll find the african quarter near the Porte de Namur - it's called Matongé.
Of the central pentagon that forms the old town, the west and north is more upscale, peppered with government buildings, embassies and office buildings, the south and east is more popular, poorer, more diverse. You'll hear little french and even less flemish, lots of moroccan, turkish, polish, and in the centre of town, the eurocracy goes to ball, and you'll hear everything from danish to greek, from german to spanish, and never forget the italians.
At the Place du Jeu de Balle, there is a second-hand market every morning of the week.
There used to be a forlorn russian there, half hiding between the stalls with a plastic bag full of zorki's and feds.

I won't go on. Have a nice day in my hometown, don't start drinking the beer too early, it can be treacherous.

thanks! i am not too interested in shopping streets, but it's good to get an overview like that. the last time i've been to brussels was about 6 years ago if i remember correctly, and i can't say i have seen much of it.
don't worry about the beer and me though, we get along. ;)
 
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