Showing posts with label grand place. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grand place. Show all posts

Friday, September 3, 2010

Brussels Webcam - Belgian Beer Weekend 2010 Live

The Belgian Beer Weekend is one of the most popular annual beer festivals in Europe, and huge crowds are expected throughout the festival weekend in the centre of Brussels.

This live web cam feed is in the Grand market place throughout the festival:

Brussels webcam

The Belgian Brewers’ association and the “Mashstaff of the Knights”, in collaboration with the City of Brussels, welcome you on this celebration of the Belgian biers.

At least 50 breweries, ranging from small, medium-sized to large Belgian breweries, participate to present you their best selections of beers. Belgium offers you a unique range of biers having the most contrasting tastes and flavours. Nowhere else in the world you can find a larger choice of regional, authentic and colourful biers.

Dates and Times:

Friday 3 September from 6 till 10 p.m.,
Saturday 4 September from 11 a.m. till 9 p.m. and
Sunday 5 September from 11 a.m. till 8 p.m.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Brussels Flower Carpet 2010 Webcam in Grand Place

Every two years in August, an enormous "flower carpet" is set up in Brussels Grand Place for a few days. A million colourful begonias are set up in patterns, and the display covers a total of 1,800 square metres. The first flower carpet was made in 1971, and due to its popularity, the tradition continued, with the flower carpet attracting a large number of tourists.

You can watch this year's flower carpet live on the Grand place webcam:

Brussels webcam

Location Information:

The Grand Place or Grote Markt is the central square of Brussels. It is surrounded by guildhalls, the city's Town Hall, and the Breadhouse (French: Maison du Roi, Dutch: Broodhuis). The square is the most important tourist destination and most memorable landmark in Brussels, along with the Atomium and Manneken Pis. It measures 68 by 110 metres (223 by 360 ft), and it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

In the 10th century, Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine constructed a fort on Saint-Géry Island, the point at which the Senne river became navigable. This was the seed of what would become Brussels. By the end of the 11th century, an open-air marketplace was set up on a dried-out marsh near the fort that was surrounded by sandbanks. The market was called the Nedermerckt, or Lower Market.