Brussels Park — also called the Royal Park and officially Parc de Bruxelles — is the largest public green space in the city center and the oldest park in the Brussels region to be opened to the public. Originally the hunting grounds of the Dukes of Brabant, the park was redesigned in the late 18th century in the rigorous French formal garden style: straight allées radiate from a central rond-point, trees are trellised into geometric walls of foliage, and the entire composition forms a deliberate visual axis between the Royal Palace to the south and the Palace of the Nation (seat of the Belgian Parliament) to the north. This grand urban geometry was conceived under the auspices of the Austrian Habsburg rulers who governed the Southern Netherlands at the time.
The park carries a charged revolutionary history. In 1793, French Revolutionary militants — the sans-culottes — stormed the grounds and systematically destroyed its sculptures, overthrowing the busts of Roman emperors that had lined the allées. The park also became a stage during the Belgian Revolution of 1830, when fighting between Dutch troops and Belgian insurgents took place within and around its gates, a pivotal episode in the founding of the independent Belgian state. Today, around sixty sculptures populate the grounds, predominantly Greco-Roman mythological figures that replaced or survived the revolutionary purges, forming one of the most concentrated open-air classical sculpture collections in the country.
Beyond its historical weight, the park rewards a slow visit. The primary bandstand, erected in 1841, still anchors the central space and hosts open-air concerts in summer. Two historic water basins feature fountains and busts of Hermes, adding a classical punctuation to the long perspective views. The trellised tree tunnels — a hallmark of formal French garden design — create shaded corridors that feel architecturally precise even in full leaf. Surrounding the park, the neoclassical facades of the Rue Royale and Place des Palais frame every exit, reinforcing the sense of moving through a living piece of 18th-century urban planning.
Entry is free and the park is open daily. It sits within easy walking distance of the Brussels Central railway station and is directly adjacent to the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium and the BELvue Museum, which documents Belgian history in a former royal residence at the park's edge. Morning visits reward those who want the allées largely to themselves; weekend afternoons bring Brussels residents out in force for picnics, jogging, and chess on the benches near the bandstand.