Alternative Brussels
This three-hour coach tour helps participants understand the issues around these changes from the residents’ point of view and offers some unexpected panoramic views of the city
![20170911_095931-scaled.jpg](https://www.arau.org/content/uploads/2021/12/20170911_095931-1125x1500.jpg)
After Belgium became independent from the Netherlands in 1830, Brussels was dramatically changed by huge public sanitation and modernisation projects. The River Senne disappeared underground and made way for Parisian-style boulevards. A new underground railway line linked to two former terminus stations and cut the city in half. Later, the arrival of the European Institutions and the creation of tertiary-sector districts around Brussels-North and Brussels-Midi stations caused their share of changes to the cityscape. This three-hour coach tour helps participants understand the issues around these changes from the residents’ point of view and offers some unexpected panoramic views of the city.