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Brussels and Ground Euro (Part 2), a Spanish-Belgian
mix
Februari 26, 2003
'The Spanish are coming!' In the sixteenth century
such news would have prompted the citizenry of Brussels to raise
the city ramparts, but today they are welcomed with open arms. The
reason is simple. For they are bringing us something special: urban
design, architecture, and the 'cohesion' in between.

'100% content - 150 pages', Brussels - capital
of Europe, GOPA 2002 . |
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Friday February 7 a decision was taken on 'Ground Euro.' From the
invited proposals for 'the development of a global urban-design
concept,' the winners turned out to be a Spanish-Belgian alliance:
Aries, Idom, Moritz et Simon, L'Atelier, Jordi Ferrando and de BVBA
SPECULOOS (no kidding!). The reason for the choice is still unknown.
No pioneering television shows or flamboyant architects who captured
the essence of a traumatic experience in a single image, just hard-boiled
officials who know what can't be done and what's not allowed. No
attractive images here, only pure unadulterated content: 'a 50-page
book brimming with ideas.' Those ideas can be summed up in a few
words. 'Ground Euro' will be a combination of 'mixité, atmosphere
and coherency,' according to urbanist Benoit Moritz in de Standaard
newspaper of February 8, 2003. What's more, he goes on, 'No master
plan is needed, just cohesion.' But the question is what use are
these good intentions to us. We know they are not new but articulated,
almost literally, in the invitation for bids on 20-07-02: 'La mixité
du quartier européen et la diversité d'activités
doivent être stimulée afin que l'intégration
du quartier européen dans la ville de Bruxelles puisse être
renforcée.'

'100% politics - 100 pages', Richtijnen Brussel-Europa,
Brussels Hoofdstedelijk Gewest 2002 |
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What, then, are the credentials of the Spanish-Belgian alliance?
First there is Idom, touted as the brains behind a new urban-design
concept for Bilbao. What we weren't told, of course, was that the
concept was the result of 'Bilbao Metropoli-30,' a non-profit association
of public and private parties, set up in the late 1980s, which developed
a strategic plan to revitalise the Spanish metropolis. It began
by tackling co-operation between public departments, resulting almost
a decade later in an architectural titan and symbol of the global
'90s. Then we have Benoit Moritz, urban designer from Brussels,
recently quoted as saying: 'Ainsi, à Bruxelles, les lieux
de la création architecturale contemporaine ne sont pas ceux
dans lesquels se situent les enjeux urbains majeurs (Quartier Léopold,
Quartier Nord, Centre Ville,
).' The 'Quartier Léopold'
referred to is 'Ground Euro.' So we can only wonder about the motives
for his current involvement. Finally there is Aries. In early 2000
it conducted a study of public transport and mobility in the European
Quarter, proposed a second high-speed train terminal for Brussels
(which, strangely enough, doesn't stop at the airport), and argued
for an infrastructure tunnel beneath 'Ground Euro.' This study was
taken on board in the redevelopment plan for 'Ground Euro' as presented
in the Mayor of Brussels' unilateral book of ideas, the so-called
'Brussel-Europa Guidelines' (spring 2002). That these guidelines
have had more impact than the ideas put forward by the think-tank
is made clear by a recent statement from the Mayor of Brussels.
'And as you are aware,' he said, 'the city authorities in Brussels
have the last word on every stone that is laid, because we issue
the building permits.'

'100% public canvas - 1 image', image by Bert
de Muynck, 2003 |
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So where to now? The alliance has been given six months to do its
'thing'; the chief contractor, meanwhile, is erecting two new office
buildings in the area; the authorities in Brussels can continue
to issue all sorts of permits; and the federal authorities can contemplate
what to do with the public space on 'Ground Euro.' Creating order
out of all this retrospectively will be a huge challenge - and that
in a city lacking the kind of contemporary ambition that brought
urban success to Bilbao. In the meantime, two competitions are also
under consideration. Nobody quite knows why, but promise is debt,
Prime Minister Verhofstadt must be thinking. To me, however, it
would be much more interesting to debate the whole process now,
to do away with pointless discussions about dynamic coherence between
static organisations, and to seek a contemporary, strategic, urban
coherence and level of ambition at a European-Belgian-Brussels political
level. For therein lies the only future and ambition for 'Ground
Euro' and Brussels in general. We can then properly assess Spanish-Belgian
alliances on their merits. One small detail: the urban ideal of
Benoit Moritz and the Mayor of Brussels is 'Euralille'. There are
people who can explain for the mayor exactly what political vision
and willpower turned that project a European archetype of urban
renewal.
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Bert de Muynck
Translation: Billy Nolan
more information:
The analysis of the complete, recent urban-design history of 'Ground
Euro' appears in Archis
2003-1
See also:
Brussels and 'Ground Euro', a theatre
in regress (ArchiNed news article)
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