Saint-Gilles, Belgium


Municipality in Flemish Community, French Community, Belgium
























Saint-Gilles
Sint-Gillis  (Dutch)

Municipality

Brussels panorama (9376295145).jpg




Flag of Saint-Gilles
Flag

Coat of arms of Saint-Gilles
Coat of arms



Saint-Gilles is located in Belgium

Saint-Gilles

Saint-Gilles



Location in Belgium

Saint-Gilles municipality in the Brussels-Capital Region


Bruxelles-Capitale Saint-Gilles.svg




Coordinates: 50°49′N 04°21′E / 50.817°N 4.350°E / 50.817; 4.350Coordinates: 50°49′N 04°21′E / 50.817°N 4.350°E / 50.817; 4.350
Country
Belgium
Community
Flemish Community
French Community
Region
Brussels
Arrondissement
Brussels
Government
 • Mayor
Charles Picqué (PS)
Area
 • Total
2.52 km2 (0.97 sq mi)
Population (1 January 2017)[1]
 • Total
50,471
 • Density
20,000/km2 (52,000/sq mi)
Postal codes
1060
Area codes
02
Website
www.stgillis.irisnet.be

Saint-Gilles (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃ ʒil] (About this sound listen)) or Sint-Gillis (Dutch pronunciation: [sɪntˈxɪlɪs] (About this sound listen)) is one of the nineteen municipalities located in the Brussels-Capital Region of Belgium. It is bordered by the City of Brussels, Anderlecht, Forest and Ixelles.


Saint-Gilles has a multicultural identity stemming from its diverse population. For example, the central square (French: Place Van Meenen, Dutch: Van Meenenplein) hosts the annual festival of Brussels' Portuguese community. The housing stock varies from semi-derelict tenements near the Brussels-South railway station in the north, to elegant patrician houses on the southern borders with Uccle and Ixelles, to tourist hotels at the inner end of the Chaussée de Charleroi/Charleroisesteenweg. Saint-Gilles is also known as one of the centers of artistic and student life in Brussels[citation needed].




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 Beginnings as Obbrussel


    • 1.2 French Regime until today



  • 2 Sights


  • 3 Statistics


  • 4 Politics


  • 5 Events


  • 6 Famous inhabitants


  • 7 Transport


  • 8 Sports


  • 9 Twin cities


  • 10 References


  • 11 External links




History



Beginnings as Obbrussel


The first houses of the hamlet of Obbrussel (meaning Upper-Brussels) were built between the 7th and the 11th century close to Altitude 100, one of the points of highest elevation in Brussels, now part of Forest. In 1216, following strong demographic growth in the area, the Forest Abbey allowed Obbrussel to become an independent parish. This independence, however, was to last only eighty years, after which the administration of the village was given to Brussels. By the 16th century, Obbrussel had grown to 41 houses.




Saint-Gilles town hall


In 1670, following orders from the Spanish government, the Count of Monterey built a fort in Obbrussel as part of the fortifications of Brussels to protect the city of Brussels against possible attacks. Erected in 1675, this fort was dismantled in the following century to give way to several important toll roads and urban development. The name of the Barrière de Saint-Gilles/Bareel van Sint-Gillis neighbourhood still commemorates those tolls to this day.



French Regime until today


During the French regime, on 31 August 1795, the village, by now called Saint-Gilles after its patron saint and main church, merged with neighbouring villages to form Uccle. Four years later, it gained its independence again, with its own mayor and municipal council. In 1830, Brussels became the capital of newly founded Belgium. As a result, the rural village of Saint-Gilles, known for centuries for its cabbage cultivation, went through an unprecedented construction spree. The population went from 2,500 around 1800 to more than 33,000 in 1880 to a peak of 60,000 in 1910.


The streets pattern was completely remodeled in the 1860s by architect and urbanist Victor Besme. These were the years when the Louise Avenue, the Brussels-South railway station, and the new Saint Giles church were built, to be followed soon after by the new jail and city hall. Today, Saint-Gilles is one of the densest municipalities of the Brussels agglomeration.



Sights





Art Nouveau house designed by Jules Brunfaut


  • Particular architectural delights are found in the dozen or more Art Nouveau houses designed by masters such as Horta, Struyvens, and Hankar, dotted around the upper part of the municipality. The house that Horta designed for himself, now the Horta Museum, is located there,[2] on Rue Americaine/Amerikaansestraat. Several of those houses have been recognized as World Heritage Sites by UNESCO in 2000.

  • The imposing town hall, built between 1900 and 1904, looks larger than it is, and bears a splendid resemblance to a French château with Venetian overtones.

  • The extant Gothic revival jail and the demolished Palais de la Monnaie/Munthof (mint) both date from the 1880s, while Saint Giles's church was built in 1867.

  • There is not a lot of open space in the municipality, although the Forest park, Brussels/Park van Vorst abuts its western side.


Statistics


Source:[3]


Population:



  • Nationality: Saint-Gilles hosts the highest number of foreigners of any Brussels municipality. Of the 49,933 registered resident s in April 2017, 24,046 (48.2%) were non-Belgian. the largest foreign communities are France (c. 5,000), Portugal (c. 2,700), Italy and Spain (c. 2,000), Morocco (c. 1,800), Poland (c. 2,600), Romania (c. 2,200), Greece and Germany (c. 500) and Brazil (c. 400).

  • Age: The population is relatively young - the average age is 35.95 years - with nearly 10,000 residents under 18 years old, and fewer than average over 65.

  • Sex: Saint-Gilles is rare in being home to more men (25,052, 50.2%) than women (24,881, 49.8%).

  • Income: Average income per inhabitant lies between €9,000 and €11,500 per year, making it the second-poorest municipality in Brussels (after only Saint Josse/Sint-Joost)

Schooling: The municipality has 13 nursery and primary schools (10 French-speaking and 3 Dutch-speaking) and 7 secondary schools (6 French-speaking and 1 Dutch-speaking).


Economy and labour market:



  • Businesses: In December 2014 the municipality was home to 4,452 VAT-registered businesses.

  • Employment: 34,050 employees and 4,220 self-employed people worked in there. Employment is comparatively fast-growing: it rose by 26% between 2006 and 2013, whereas for the Brussels region as whole it stood still. It has a high female labour market participation rate - 59% as against 68% for men. The employment rate in 2015 was 49%. Unemployment stood at 24.2% in 2015, having fallen from 28.2% in 2005.

  • Tourism: Hotel-nights have risen by nearly 20% between 2007 and 2015. In that year, 754,429 hotel-nights were recorded, of which 584,889 (7%) were foreigners.

  • Property prices: Between 2010 and 2014, the average sale price of a flat in Saint-Gilles was €191,381. In 2014 around 500 properties changed hands.

  • Rents: Most accommodation in the municipality is rented. The average rent or a 2-bedroom flat in 2013 was €669 (as against €732 for Brussels as a whole). There were 1,1,23 social housing units in 2015.


Politics


The local council usually has a socialist majority, and the current mayor is Charles Picqué, who is a former Minister-President of the Brussels-Capital Region.



Events


Saint-Gilles hosts:


  • an annual open day for local artists, the Parcours des Artistes

  • the annual festival of Brussels's Portuguese community

  • an annual winegrowers' festival (fête des vignerons)


Famous inhabitants



  • Alme Meyvis, landscape painter (1877-1932)


  • Jef Lambeaux, sculptor (1852–1908)


  • Victor Horta, Art Nouveau architect (1861–1947)


  • Pierre Paulus, expressionist painter (1881–1959)


  • Paul Delvaux, surrealist painter (1897–1994)


  • Paul-Henri Spaak, politician and statesman (1899–1972)


  • Rob Redding, American abstract painter and media proprietor (1976-)


Transport


Saint-Gilles’s dense population is well served by public transport: the Brussels-South railway station with its international high speed connections sits at the northern tip of the municipal territory, and the underground premetro line passes southwards through it. By 2015 the line should have been converted into heavy metro line 3, running from Albert northwards to Bordet.


Inhabitants have access to the 3, 4, 51, 81, 91, 92, 93, 94 and 97 trams as well as buses 48 to Stalle, 134 to St-Job, 136/137 to Alsemberg, 365a to Charleroi and W to Waterloo. There are 5 pods of Cambio shared cars, at Dumont, Horta, Janson, Parvis/Voorplein and Porte de Hal/Hallepoort. A car is also sited at the Village Partenaire business centre at Rue Théodore Verhaegen 150.


As of 2016[update] the Taiwanese airline EVA Air provides shuttle buses to and from Amsterdam Airport Schiphol from Saint-Gilles, near the Brussels-South (Midi) railway station. The service is operated with Reizen Lauwers NV.[4]



Sports


Saint Gilles has a legendary football club called Royal Union Saint Gilloise, which was successful until the 1930s.



Twin cities



  •  France: Puteaux


  •  Luxembourg: Esch-sur-Alzette


  •  Italy: Velletri


  •  Germany: Offenbach am Main


  •  Austria: Mödling


  •  Serbia: Zemun


  •  Netherlands: Tilburg


  •   Switzerland: Schaffhausen


  •  United Kingdom: Tower Hamlets


References




  1. ^ Population per municipality as of 1 January 2017 (XLS; 397 KB)


  2. ^ "Saint-Gilles — Région bruxelloise - Brussels Gewest". be.brussels. 


  3. ^ Saint-Gilles en Chiffres/Sint-Gillis in Cijfers, Municipality of Saint-Gilles, 2017


  4. ^ "Between Belgium and Amsterdam Airport." EVA Air. Retrieved on February 29, 2016.




  • Bernier, Fernand (1904). Weissenbruch, ed. Monographie de Saint-Gilles lez-Bruxelles - Histoire et description illustrées (in French). Brussels. OCLC 80713780. 


External links


Media related to Saint-Gilles, Belgium at Wikimedia Commons



  • Official web page, in French or Dutch






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