Categories
Europe

Don’t miss the Carpet of Flowers in Brussels

Carpet of Flowers at the Grand Place, Brussels, Belgium (courtesy Yabby at Flickr CC)It only happens every other August.

It’s happening in August 2010.

It fills the center of the magnificent Grand Place with the most gorgeous, colorful carpet of painstakingly arranged real flowers.

You can read more about it on the Brussels flower carpet website.

There are fun things for kids to do in Brussels….plus everyone gets to eat lots of frites, mussels, chocolate and naturally there is great Belgian beer for the adults.

You should go!

Categories
Europe

Visit bountiful Brussels

Mini-Europe, with the giant Atomium behind it (Scarborough photo)

Are you looking for a beautiful, easily accessible European city that’s not on the London-Paris-Rome standard tourist circuit?

I recommend Brussels (or Bruxelles in French; the Belgians are arguing a lot lately about their nation’s heritage split.)

Located in the northern, historically Flemish part of Belgium (along with medieval Bruges/Brugge, artistic Ghent and industrial Antwerp) Brussels is elegant, cosmopolitan and culturally-rich, plus it’s fun for families.

The “To See” list….

** To start exploring, orient yourself in the middle — the center of Brussels is the magnificent town square called the Grand’Place or de Grote Markt. It’s huge and spectacular, with ornate Gothic and Baroque buildings, lots of cafes and historic businesses. It’s a “wow, we aren’t in Kansas….” moment when you walk into it.

** You have to do it, and the kids will get a giggle….view the symbol of Brussels, a small bronze statue (often in costume) of a boy peeing. Yes, that’s the Manneken Pis.

** See the hokey but fun theme park called Mini-Europe; scale models of European landmarks that you can walk through. My children both really liked it.

Manneken Pis, dressed that day as....hip-hop guy? (Scarborough photo)

** Next to Mini-Europe is the Atomium, a bizarre-looking giant building that’s supposed to look like an iron crystal, with nine 200-ton balls connected to each other.

There are exhibits inside and and you can go from one ball to another, all the way to the top. 2008 is the 50th anniversary of its construction.

** Eat! They say that the Belgians eat as well as the French and as much as the Germans, and I’ll vouch for that. Big portions of yummy stuff.

Okay, maybe your kids aren’t into the traditional steamed mussels with garlic and white wine, so pawn them off with croque-monsieur/tosti while you snarf shellfish and drink fabulous Belgian beer. Belgian frites (fries) are the best you’ll ever taste.

Everyone gets dessert….Belgian chocolate, of course.

** Hotel tip: Lodgings can be pricey because there are a lot of diplomats around (EU Headquarters is here) and businesspeople visit Brussels on expense accounts.

Try for weekend or off-peak rates at a business hotel, when they’re trying to fill rooms. We stayed at the Novotel Brussels Centre Tour Noire; it was a business hotel but we got a great weekend rate and the modern hotel is built around a medieval tower. Kids thought that was cool.

Brussels Novotel Centre Tour Noire, complete with tower (Scarborough photo)

More links of interest:

Don’t forget, you can pop over to Brussels from London on the Eurostar high-speed train in less than two hours.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Brussels, Belgium, Europe

Categories
Europe

More Ideas for Brussels, Belgium

A lot of the Brussels places mentioned in this NY Times Travel article are not really relevant for families, but I do recommend the Ibis Hotels.

Ibis is a hotel chain all over Europe; their properties are normally quite centrally located, and the price is right. Sort of a Days Inn-level place to stay when you don’t want to get fancy but don’t want to stay in some fleabag.

(Don’t get me wrong; sometimes a unique and special hotel or inn is a vital part of really enjoying a destination, but many times you’ll want to save your money, spend a minimal amount on decent lodging, and splurge elsewhere.)

As for food — even if the kids turn up their noses at Belgian mussels, the adults mustn’t. Just get them a grilled cheese sandwich (or Croque Monsieur, same thing with ham) and the parents can dig into the briny little goodies, complete with a helping of good Belgian beer. Ummm. They’ll come with frites, or what we call French Fries, some of the best you’ll ever crunch into.

Can’t miss with Belgian chocolate, either.

They say that the Belgians eat as well as the French and as much as the Germans. Yep, I can vouch for that….great food and plenty of it.

Categories
Europe

Mini-Europe in Brussels, Belgium

Mini People in Mini-Europe, Brussels Belgium (Scarborough photo)Here is an item at Jaunted about a fun family stop in Brussels called Mini-Europe.

It’s scaled-down miniatures of famous European buildings and places.

Walk around the Parthenon in Greece, the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin (with a little bit of the Berlin Wall as it used to look,) even a small-scale Eiffel Tower and Leaning Tower of Pisa.

Photo Op in Brussels, Belgium (Scarborough photo)

My kids really enjoyed our visit, perhaps because finally those grandiose buildings were scaled for little people and they got to play like Godzilla.

Tons of goofy photo-ops!

That strange atomic-looking thing behind the “Buckingham Palace guard” IS supposed to look like an atom — it’s the giant Atomium, built for an Expo in 1958.

It makes a cool backdrop for the Mini-Europe mini-buildings.

Related Family Travel post: Visit bountiful Brussels