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| Chaussee De Louvain 805
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Brussels, 1140 BE
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Area: Brussels City Area
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The Gresham Belson Hotel is situated approximately four miles from the city center and five miles from Brussels International Airport. Brussels Expo is ten miles away.
Hotel amenities include room service, same day laundry service, complimentary airport transfer, and fitness suite. Onsite drinks and dining are available at the Dublin Room and the Belson Piano Bar. The wood-lined piano bar is decorated in warm colors; here, guests can orders drinks and light French cuisine in front of the open fire. Breakfast is served every morning, and guests have use of the hotels fitness suite. Other services include banquet facilities, multilingual staff, cribs, and room service. This modern building, which includes wireless Internet access throughout the property, features 135 guestrooms in neutral colors, and matching patterned bedspreads and curtains.
Guest rooms feature direct-dial telephones, voicemail, color TVs, radios, mini-bars, coffee/tea making facilities, garment presses, hairdryers, complimentary toiletries, and dataports.
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Gresham Belson Hotel Property Information:
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Rooms:
135
Floors:
5
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- Dining
- Fitness facility
- Kids allowed
- Shuttle
- Tennis court
- Business center
- Kitchen facility
- Room service
- Meeting room
- Data port
- Golf
- Dry cleaning
- Wheel chair access
- Conventions
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More photos
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Driving Directions
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- BRU - BRUSSELS NATIONAL AIRPORT - 6.0KM / NW
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Nearby Attractions
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4 Palais Des Congress BRU 6 OST 62 ANR 19 19 Antwerp 12 Waterloo 3 Zaventem 4 Brussels 3 Brussels City Center
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Restaurants
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El Paduwa - 0.5 Kilometers North Open Sunday - Saturday 1100 - 2300 For Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner. Il Mediterraneo - 0.5 Kilometers North Open Sunday - Saturday 1100 - 2300 For Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner.
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Brussels Events & Entertainment
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January:
International Film Festival
This festival has been held for over 30 years. It features first release independent US and European films. It takes place at the Palais des Congrès 02/513-4130.
Antique Fair
The annual 10 day event is held at Brussels' Palais des Beaux-Arts in late January. It offers the best from antique dealers in Belgium and neighboring countries and is eagerly anticipated each year.
February:
International Cartoon and Animated Film Festival
This festival is a world premier of feature length films and about 100 shorts produced in Belgium and elsewhere.
Chocolate Passion Fair
Held on St. Valentine's weekend at Place du Grand Sablon. The theme is chocolate.
Carnival
Celebrated throughout Belgium with the largest and most popular celebration occurring one hour southwest of Brussels in Binche. The highlight is on Shrove Tuesday when the elaborately costumed local men dance in the town's central square.
Late April-early May:
The Royal Greenhouses
02/513-0770 at Laeken Palace near Brussels, with superb flower and plant arrangements, are open to the public for a limited period of about 10 days.
Festival van Vlaanderen
Brussels hosts this classical music festival, which continues until October.
May:
The Queen Elisabeth international music competition
02/513-0099 is one of the most demanding events of its kind. The categories rotate: in 2000 the theme was piano; in 2001 voice and in 2002 violin
The Kunsten Festival des Arts
02/512-7450 is a month-long international celebration of contemporary drama, dance, and music.
Late May:
The Brussels Jazz Marathon
0900/00606 The last weekend in May brings jazz bands and enthusiasts to the stages all over the city for a series of concerts. Gigs and informal sessions in more than 50 clubs and pubs, plus outdoor concerts in the Grand'place and Grand Sablon featuring leading jazz musicians. One ticket for all events, includes free shuttle between venues and public transport.
Brussels 20km Run
Annual competition held in the streets of the capital on a Sunday in mid -May which attracts about 20,000 runners.
June:
Battle of Waterloo
Every 5 years in mid-June the battle of Waterloo is re-enacted. The next scheduled re-enactment is in 2005.
Couleur Café
During the last weekend in June, world music, dance, rap and drums come together for a three day festival.
Late June or early July:
Ommegang
02/512-1961 takes over Brussels's Grand'place. It's a sumptuous and stately pageant reenacting a procession that honored Emperor Charles V in 1549. Book early.
Festival of Wallonia
Young Belgian musicians perform classical concerts throughout Brussels and Wallonia until October.
July:
Foire du Midi
This huge, annual month long fun fair runs from mid-July on the Blvd. du Midi. Large crowds, a ferris wheel, roller coasters, Belgian waffles, are all part of the enjoyment of the event.
July 21:
Belgium's National Day
is celebrated in Brussels with a military March, followed by a popular feast in the parc de Bruxelles and brilliant fireworks.
August 9:
A procession of "giants" parades from the Sablon to the Grand -Place and a maypole is planted there.
Mid-Aug.:
A flower carpet, painstakingly laid out, covers and transforms the entire Grand'place of Brussels for two days. Even years only; next in 2002.
Sept.-Dec.:
Every other year, the Europalia festival honors a different country with exhibitions, concerts, and other events amounting to a thorough inventory of its cultural heritage. In 2001 a country will be thus honored in Brussels and in other European cities .02/507-8550.
Les Nuits Botanique
A week of celebrating rock, international music and pop is held in the Botanique in mid-September.
2nd weekend in September:
On National Heritage Day on selected weekends in September 02/511-1840 buildings and monuments of architectural or historical interest throughout Belgium, that are not normally accessible to the public, are opened to all.
2nd weekend in December:
The European Christmas Market in the Grand'place in Brussels features the traditions and products of many different European Union countries.
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Brussels Destination Overview
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Brussels is an exciting, modern city, yet it is rich in strikingly beautiful medieval and art nouveau buildings. It has outstanding museums and galleries and a vibrant cultural life. The heart of the capital city of Belgium lies inside a circle of main roads. The inner city can easily be explored within this circle on foot, by bus, or by tram. For areas outside it, there is an excellent subway system.
Over the centuries, Brussels (Bruxelles in French; Brussel in Flemish) has been ruled by every major power at or near its boundaries from the Romans to the Spanish to the Germans. Its colonial history provided a fitting prelude to its current status. Brussels has become an international business community composed of diplomats, lobbyists, and euro-politicians connected with NATO and the European Union. International business arrived in the past three decades, resulting in blocks lined with steel-and-glass office buildings. However, these modern edifices are only a few steps from the cobbled streets, splendid cafés, and graceful art nouveau architecture that speak to the city's eventful past.
Belgium's unique languages date back to the time when the Franks were forcing Celts and Gauls into the land's southern regions, making an early form of the Dutch language the norm in the north. French (with Dutch influence), is the accepted language in the south. Brussels, located in the middle, is one of the world's few officially bilingual capitals. Residents of Brussels tend to be politically and religiously conservative and to cling to family and national traditions. The vast majority of Belgians are Roman Catholics, and despite a decline in church attendance, religious customs still flavor much of Belgium's daily life.
Until the late 19th century, Brussels was a riverside city, built along the banks of the River Senne. At that time, a decision was made to brick over the river and thus eliminate it as a source of flooding and any other annoyance it might cause. The river still flows under the bricked boulevard that covers it. In order to photograph the Senne,however, one must travel outside the city. Early Belgian artists are credited with inventing oil painting, and the country has produced many masterpieces.
The Flemish primitive Jan Van Eyck started the tradition in the 15th century. Pieter Brueghel followed with his portrayals of peasant life in the 16th century, and Pieter Paul Rubens dominated early 17th century art as the leading artist of the Baroque period. For most of the 18th century, while Brussels was under Austrian rule, buildings were designed in a modest rational, neoclassical style. After the war of independence ended in 1831 Brussels built with a new exuberance in an effort to catch up with and surpass the extravagant structures of London and Paris. The first covered shopping gallery was a product of this period.
The glass covered Galeries Saint Hubert is still open today, and is as astounding as when it was built! The most dramatic post World War II structure is the Atomium, which is modeled on a molecule of iron. It was built for the Belgian metal industry as the showpiece for the 1958 World's Fair. The 300 foot tall steel structure consists of nine separate spheres linked by cylindrical columns. Throughout the years Brussels has been a world leader not only in architecture but also in literature, music, dance, painting, sculpture, and of course textiles.
The city contains a wealth of examples showing excellence in each of these areas. "One of the most beautiful town squares in Europe, if not in the world", is a phrase often heard when visitors in Brussels try to describe the beauty of this central market square. French speakers refer to it as the 'Grand-Place', and in Dutch it is called 'de Grote Markt'. Writers over the years, including Victor Hugo and Baudelaire were struck by the charm of the market square with its rows of guild houses set against the backdrop of the Town Hall and the king's house. The origins of the Grand-Place were humble.
The site began as a sand bank between two brooks that ran downhill to the river Senne. The "niedermerckt", or 'lower market' was built along it first. By the 12th century, Brussels had become a commercial crossroads between Bruges (in Flanders) , Cologne , and France. English wool, French wines and German beer were sold in the harbour and at the market. During the early Middle Ages small wooden houses were scattered around the market.
Beginning in the 14th century, wealthy families constructed stone mansions. Gradually the market turned into the main commercial and administrative center of the city. Between 1402 and 1455 the Town Hall was built. The square had by then become the political center where meetings were held, where executions took place and where dukes, kings and emperors where officially received. In the centuries that followed most wooden houses where replaced with beautifully decorated stone ones, owned by the powerful Brussels trade guilds.
The Grand Sablon is an elegant square surrounded by restaurants, cafés, and exclusive antique shops. Every Saturday and Sunday morning a lively antiques market takes over the upper part of the square. The petit Sablon, the other half of the square, is surrounded by a magnificent wrought-iron fence topped by 48 small bronze statues representing the city's guilds. Belgian food is highly regarded throughout Europe. Some say it's second only to French cuisine.
Combining French and German styles, meat and seafood are the main raw ingredients. The Belgians claim to be the inventors of frites (potato chips, or fries), and judging by availability, it's a claim few would contest. These crisp delights rank in popularity with Belgian chocolate and Belgian beer. Mussels are another favorite. There are many attractions the whole family will enjoy.
One that is sure to please is Brupark, an outstanding theme park in the city's northern suburbs. There the Atomium can be viewed from the ground by going inside the structure. There is a 24 theater complex, a planetarium, a water park, and a miniature re-creation of Europe that has several hands - on components. Shopping in Brussels is a favorite occupation. Though there are no longer 22,000 lace makers as there were in the 17th century, visitors will have at least 40 lace makers' shops from which to choose.
Much lace is now machine made, but handmade lace can still be found. Art and antique shops are also abundant. Boutiques feature the latest fashions on several of the city's streets. Popular sports to be enjoyed in Brussels are soccer (voetbal in Flemish), archery, horse-ball, golf, and tennis. Nightly entertainment offers everything from discos to classical music to jazz and rock.
Some clubs feature Latin music.
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Contact our 24/7 Customer Service Center
New reservations:
• Please call 866-899-8039
• Outside the US please call 00-800-84469370 OR 1-210-507-5997
• Give code 6932 when calling
Existing reservations:
• Contact a Customer Service representative at 866-270-2849
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| BOOK ONLINE OR BY PHONE |
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Select check-in date
Select check-out date
24 Hour Hotel Reservations call Toll Free 1-866-899-8039 from the USA or Canada
International Callers call Toll Free 00-800-86071350 or +1 210-507-5997
For the Best Rates, be sure to mention Promo Code 6932
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