Legendary Hotel Metropole closing its doors – probably forever
Brussels’s only remaining 19th-century hotel has entered talks with unions about laying off its 130 employees
Victim of circumstances, says hotel
Even those who have never stayed in the 250-room hotel on Brouckèreplein are familiar with its famous café. Both residents and tourists were fond of having a drink amid the luxurious atmosphere.
The 125-year-old hotel was hurt by the dip in tourism following the 2015-16 terrorist attacks in Paris and Brussels and always claimed to be beleaguered by the establishment of the pedestrian zone. It will now close at least temporarily, and likely for good.
“Due to structural difficulties over the last five years and the current economic situation, we no longer have the financial resources to guarantee our activities,” the hotel told Bruzz in a statement. “We are considering stopping definitively.”
The works on the pedestrian zone and the metro station have had a major impact on our activities
The privately owned hotel has started the Renault procedure, the legally required consultation process when a business lets workers go in Belgium. There are 129 employees at the Metropole, who will be represented by unions in talks with management.
“The works on the pedestrian zone and the metro station have had a major impact on our activities,” said the hotel. “We were not accessible to vehicles for several months and were confronted with a construction zone outside our doors and noise nuisance for a long period of time. We were simply no longer an attractive option for individuals or event organisers.”
The Café Metropole opened in 1890, and the hotel followed four years later. It was the first hotel in Brussels to have both electricity and central heating. It was the only 19th-century hotel still operating in the capital and the only five star hotel that was not part of an international chain.
Photo courtesy Infotourism.be