Tropismes

Brussels


With its gold-wreath-encircled columns and ornate gilded ceiling, this is about the prettiest bookshop you could imagine. The literary connections are hot too: this is where the exiled Victor Hugo visited his lover/assistant Juliette Drouet. Some titles are in English.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Brussels attractions

1. Jeanneke Pis

0.04 MILES

Squatting just off Rue des Bouchers, this pigtailed female counterpart of Manneken Pis is the work of sculptor Denis Adrien Debouvrie, who installed her…

2. Rue des Bouchers

0.04 MILES

Uniquely colourful Rue and Petite Rue des Bouchers are a pair of narrow alleys jam-packed with pavement tables, pyramids of lemons and iced displays of…

3. Galeries St-Hubert

0.09 MILES

When opened in 1847 by King Léopold I, the glorious Galeries St-Hubert formed Europe’s very first shopping arcade. Many enticing shops lie behind its…

4. Brussels City Museum

0.12 MILES

Old maps, architectural relics and paintings give a historical overview of the city. Don’t miss Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s 1567 Cortège de Noces (Wedding…

5. Maison du Roi

0.12 MILES

This fanciful feast of neo-Gothic arches, verdigris statues and mini-spires is bigger, darker and nearly 200 years younger than the surrounding guildhalls…

6. Le Pigeon

0.12 MILES

Victor Hugo lived here at the artists' guildhall during a part of his exile from France in 1852.

7. Chaloupe d’Or

0.13 MILES

The dressmakers' guildhall is now a particularly splendid grand café whose upper-storey rooms (when open) offer fine views across the square.

8. Maison des Boulangers

0.14 MILES

The bakers' guildhall is now the cafe Le Roy d’Espagne. The gilded bronze bust above the door is bakers’ patron St-Aubert.