Inurban planning,Brusselization (UK and US) orBrusselisation (UK variant) (French:bruxellisation,Dutch:verbrusseling) is "the indiscriminate and careless introduction of modern high-rise buildings intogentrified neighbourhoods" and has become a byword for "haphazard urban development and redevelopment."[1][2]
The notion applies to anywhere whose development follows the pattern of the uncontrolled development ofBrussels in the 1960s and 1970s, that resulted from a lack ofzoning regulations and the city authorities'laissez-faire approach to city planning.[1][3][4][5]
The 1950s was not the first time thatBrussels had been radically altered by major redevelopment. Two prior sweeping changes to the city's urban fabric were the straight-linedcentral boulevards modeled afterParis, which were created following thecovering and diverting of the river Senne, as well as theNorth–South railway connection, which took around forty years to finish (1911–1952), and which had left swaths of thecity center filled with debris and craters for decades. Another precedent was the construction of thePalace of Justice, the largest building erected in the 19th century (1866–1883),[6] for which a section of theMarolles/Marollen neighbourhood was demolished.[7]
The writerAndré de Vries asserts that the penchant for heavy-handedness can be traced back to the reign ofKing Leopold II in the late 19th century, and possibly even all the way back to thebombardment of the city byLouis XIV's troops in 1695. "There is barely one building still standing", he says, "from before 1695, with the exception of some churches and the Town Hall".[8] Leopold II sought to give Brussels the image of a grand capital city of an imperial/colonial power. By the middle 20th century, there was a tacit alliance between urban development entrepreneurs and local government, with a modernist agenda and with their sights set firmly on large-scale development projects. The citizens of Brussels were largely left out of the process.[9]
The original Brusselization was the type of urban regeneration performed by Brussels in connection with the 1958 Brussels World's Fair (Expo 58). In order to prepare the city for Expo 58, buildings were torn down without regard either to their architectural or historical importance,[10] high-capacity square office or apartment buildings were built, boulevards were created and tunnels dug. Among the most controversial was the large-scale demolition oftown houses for development of the high-risebusiness district in theNorthern Quarter. All of these changes were designed to quickly increase the number of people working and living in the city and improve transportation.
Further radical changes resulted from Brussels's role as the center of theEU andNATO,[1][10] beginning with the construction of theEuropean Commission's headquarters in 1959.[11] The introduction of a high-speed rail network in the 1990s was the latest excuse to speculate on multiple rows of properties for modern office or hotel redevelopment, which led to the razing of neighborhood blocks nearBrussels-South railway station.
These changes caused outcry amongst the citizens of Brussels and byenvironmentalist andpreservationist organizations. The demolition ofVictor Horta'sArt NouveauMaison du Peuple/Volkshuis in 1965 was one focus of such protests, as was the construction of the IBM Tower in 1978.[1] Many architects also protested, and it was the architectural world that coined the name Brusselization for what was happening to Brussels. Architects such asLéon Krier andMaurice Culot formulated ananti-capitalist urban planning theory, as a rejection of the rampant modernism that they saw overtaking Brussels.[12][3]
In the early 1990s, laws were introduced in Brussels restricting the demolition of buildings that were deemed to have architectural or historical significance, and in 1999, the city authorities' urban development plan explicitly declared high-rise buildings to be architecturally incompatible with the existing aesthetics of the city centre.[1][11] This led to the rise of what was termedfaçadisme, i.e. the destruction of the whole interior of a historic building while preserving its historicfaçade, with new buildings erected behind or around it.[13][2][8]
These laws were the Town Planning Act 1991, which gave local authorities the powers to refuse demolition requests on the grounds of historical, aesthetic, or cultural significance, and to designate architectural heritage zones; and the Heritage Conservation Act of 1993, which gave the government of the Brussels-Capital Region the power to designate buildings to be protected for historic reasons. However, this system had its deficiencies. Whilst the Capital Region's government could designate historic buildings, it was thenineteen municipal authorities within it that were responsible for demolition permits. Not until the introduction of apermis unique system was this internecine conflict resolved.[11]