The Halle Gate (French: Porte de Hal, pronounced [pɔʁt al]; Dutch: Hallepoort) is a former medieval city gate and the last vestige of the second walls of Brussels, Belgium. Built between 1381 and 1383, it was heavily restored in the 19th century in its current neo-Gothic style by the architect Henri Beyaert. It is now a museum dedicated to the medieval City of Brussels, part of the Royal Museums of Art and History (RMAH).

The Halle Gate is located on Boulevard du Midi/Zuidlaan, just south of the Marolles/Marollen neighbourhood, between the City of Brussels and Saint-Gilles municipalities. This site is served by Brussels-South railway station, as well as by the metro and premetro (underground tram)...Read more

The Halle Gate (French: Porte de Hal, pronounced [pɔʁt al]; Dutch: Hallepoort) is a former medieval city gate and the last vestige of the second walls of Brussels, Belgium. Built between 1381 and 1383, it was heavily restored in the 19th century in its current neo-Gothic style by the architect Henri Beyaert. It is now a museum dedicated to the medieval City of Brussels, part of the Royal Museums of Art and History (RMAH).

The Halle Gate is located on Boulevard du Midi/Zuidlaan, just south of the Marolles/Marollen neighbourhood, between the City of Brussels and Saint-Gilles municipalities. This site is served by Brussels-South railway station, as well as by the metro and premetro (underground tram) station Porte de Hal/Hallepoort on lines 2, 3, 4 and 6.

Medieval structure

Built between 1381 and 1383, the Halle Gate was one of the seven city gates from the second set of defensive walls that enclosed Brussels, and its only remaining trace. It first bore the name of Obbrussel Gate (Old Dutch: Obbrusselsche, for "Upper Brussels", now Saint-Gilles).[1] The gate was renamed for the city of Halle (French: Hal), now located in Flemish Brabant, which it faces. The original gate included a portcullis and drawbridge over a moat. Though their military function ended in 1564, these features are visible to this day.

In the 16th and 17th centuries, new siege weapons and techniques, including the advent of artillery, forced the city to modernise the defences in order to keep potential attackers at a safe distance from the walls, including the addition of ditches, bastions and ravelins. The gate's defence was reinforced around 1675 by Monterey Fort, Saint Clara Fort and Castel Rodrigo.[1] The former was the most important defensive work, its name coming from the Spanish count responsible for modernising the defences. It was built between 1672 and 1675 on the heights of Obbrussel, south of the Halle Gate, by the military engineers Merex and Blom.

As with the rest of the city's fortifications, the Halle Gate and Monterey Fort were ineffective, and were not able to prevent the French bombardment of Brussels in 1695, from the heights of Scheut, in Anderlecht, as part of the War of the Grand Alliance. The defensive works proved equally ineffective when French troops seized the city in 1746 during the War of the Austrian Succession, afterwards leaving the defensive works in ruins. By that time, siege was no longer an important part of warfare. Due to the growth of commerce and improved roads, the fortifications did little more than frustrate transit into and out of the city.

The Halle Gate c. 1612, detail of a drawing by Remigio Cantagallina 
The Halle Gate c. 1612, detail of a drawing by Remigio Cantagallina
The Halle Gate in 1786, watercolour painting by Paul Vitzthumb 
The Halle Gate in 1786, watercolour painting by Paul Vitzthumb
The Halle Gate marked on the 18th-century Ferraris map 
The Halle Gate marked on the 18th-century Ferraris map
19th-century restoration

While the other six gateways and the defensive walls were demolished between 1818 and 1840 to make way for the Small Ring (Brussels' inner ring road), the Halle Gate survived as it then served as a military prison. It was at other times used as a customs house, a granary, and a Lutheran church.[1][2] In 1830, as Belgium gained its independence, demolition work had reached the gate, but the new government decided to spare it. In 1840, the street just inside of it was raised 3 metres (10 ft), making it impassable to vehicles.[1] A toll was nonetheless still levied on commercial goods passing there until this practice was discontinued in 1865.

From 1868 to 1871, as the city was being modernised, the architect Henri Beyaert, with little regard for historical accuracy, transformed the austere medieval tower into something of a neo-Gothic castle, which fit better with the contemporary romantic perception of the Middle Ages.[2] The outer entrance, now facing Saint-Gilles, is closer to the original appearance. In front of the inner gate, facing the City of Brussels, Beyaert added a circular tower topped by a large conical roof, containing a monumental spiral staircase. The old, rectangular windows were replaced by ogival ones. Beyaert also added turrets, a walkway and new battlements.[3]

In 1847, the Halle Gate was included in Belgium's Musée royal d'Armures, d'Antiquités et d'Ethnologie ("Royal Museum of Armour, Antiquities and Ethnology"), now named the Royal Museums of Art and History (RMAH).[2] The collections included diplomatic gifts, mementoes and curiosa owned by the Dukes of Burgundy and subsequently the Habsburg archdukes, and which had been placed, until then, in various locations in Brussels. By 1889, the Halle Gate had become too small to house most of the collections, which were relocated to the Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark Museum. The gate continues to display armour and weapons.[4]

The Halle Gate before 1823, drawing by Vitzthumb from Collection des anciennes portes de Bruxelles 
The Halle Gate before 1823, drawing by Vitzthumb from Collection des anciennes portes de Bruxelles
Interior of the Halle Gate before 1823, Vitzthumb, Collection des anciennes portes de Bruxelles 
Interior of the Halle Gate before 1823, Vitzthumb, Collection des anciennes portes de Bruxelles
View of the remnants of Brussels' city walls near the Halle Gate in 1830–31, painting by François Bossuet 
View of the remnants of Brussels' city walls near the Halle Gate in 1830–31, painting by François Bossuet
The Halle Gate in the late 19th century, after restoration 
The Halle Gate in the late 19th century, after restoration
20th century–present

In 1976, the Halle Gate was in a dangerous state of disrepair and was closed. The building received protected status on 13 September 1990.[5] After a public competition, won by architect Marco Bollen, renovations began, and the building was reopened to the public in 1991. Further restoration was stalled due to lack of funds, and the museum only housed temporary exhibitions for several years. In March 2007, the second phase of the restoration began, and the completed museum finally opened on 6 June 2008, with the "Saint-Gilles" (drawbridge) entrance as the prestigious main entrance to the building.

Right next to the Halle Gate is the Porte de Hal/Hallepoort metro station, which opened in 1988, and the premetro station of the same name, which opened in 1993 (the metro operates one level below the premetro lines). The station contains several artworks by the famous Brussels artist François Schuiten.

 The Halle Gate in 2020,
Saint-Gilles' side  The Halle Gate in 2020,
City of Brussels' side
^ a b c d Mardaga 1993, p. 188. ^ a b c Spapens 2005, p. 19. ^ Mardaga 1993, p. 188–191. ^ "History | KMKG". www.kmkg-mrah.be. Archived from the original on 19 December 2019. Retrieved 27 June 2020. ^ "Bruxelles Pentagone - Porte de Hal - Boulevard du Midi 150 - Porte de Hal". www.irismonument.be. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
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