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The major town houses of Victor Horta are four town houses in Brussels, Belgium, which have been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2000. All four houses were designed and built by the Belgian architect Victor Horta (1861–1947), who pioneered the Art Nouveau style during the mid-1890s.
Seen from the garden at the back the Stoclet Palace "becomes a villa suburbana with its rear façade sculpturally modelled by bay windows, balconies and terraces" in the words of architectural historian Annette Freytag, which gave the Stoclet family a building with "all the advantages of a comfortable urban mansion and a country house at the ...
The Saint-Cyr House [2] (French: Maison Saint-Cyr; Dutch: Huis Saint-Cyr) is a historic town house in Brussels, Belgium. It was designed by the architect Gustave Strauven , and built between 1901 and 1903, in Art Nouveau style.
The Hôtel Solvay (French: Hôtel Solvay; Dutch: Hotel Solvay) is a large historic town house in Brussels, Belgium.It was designed by Victor Horta for Armand Solvay, the son of the chemist and industrialist Ernest Solvay, and built between 1895 and 1900, in Art Nouveau style.
The House and Workshop of master glassmaker Sterner (French: Maison et Atelier du maître-verrier Sterner; Dutch: Atelier en Woning van meester glasmaker Sterner) in Brussels, Belgium, is the former town house and workshop of the master glassworker Clas Grüner Sterner. [1]
The house was designed, from the very beginning, as a joint work intended for private use. Cauchie did the drawings for the house but worked together with his wife to design and decorate their home-workshop. Cauchie and his wife filled the house with their multiple works of art (i.e. paintings, wall coverings, furniture, etc.)
This house later became the home of the architect Jean Delhaye, a collaborator of Horta, who became, after the latter's death, the great defender of his work. In 1901, Horta added a second extension to the house, on the other side this time, on half of a plot acquired by van Eetvelde, who directly sold the other half to his neighbour.
The south-eastern sides of the Place de Brouckère were razed in 1967–1971, at the same time as the two blocks delimited by the Place de la Monnaie/Muntplein, the Rue de l'Évêque / Bisschopsstraat, the Rue de Laeken / Lakensestraat, the Rue des Augustins / Augustijnenstraat and the Rue du Fossé aux Loups / Wolvengracht, to make room for the modernist Monnaie Center by the architects ...