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Hôtel Métropole, Brussels

De Brouckèreplein 31, 1000 Brussel, Belgium (show on map)

Expert reviews

Lonely Planet review:

“Rooms at Hôtel Métropole have been redecorated in styles varying from art deco to ‘Venetian Baroque’ – slightly overcolourful for some tastes. Much of the furniture is restored from 1930s originals.”

Telegraph review:

“The Hotel Métropole, close to Place Ste-Catherine and Grand Place, is perhaps the most celebrated of the Brussels grand hotels, full of glamour and elegance, marbled halls, glittering chandeliers and polished brass. The public areas are palatial, there’s a lively café/bar and the gourmet restaurant is excellent.”

Guest rating

4.0 out of 5.0

Ranked 12th in Brussels


This an aggregated guest review rating of Hôtel Métropole, Brussels. We have taken customer review ratings from hotel booking sites, search engines, the official hotel website and other travel platforms. This is the average of all those ratings. We only list places that have a guest review rating of at least 4.0 out of 5.0


What guests liked


Value for Money

82.32 %

Ranked 12th in Brussels


We use a smart algorithm to determine the value for money each hotel offers. The score is based on a combination of aggregated guest review ratings and the average nightly rate. The higher the percentage, the better the overall value you receive for the price you pay.


All you need to know

The Hotel Métropole in Brussels is an absolute masterpiece of Belle Époque architecture that feels like stepping directly into a time machine. Originally opened in 1895, it was born out of a brilliant marketing move by the Wielemans-Ceuppens family of brewers. They initially opened a café to sell their beer, and it became such a massive hit that they bought the bank building next door and transformed it into a luxury hotel.

To bring their grand vision to life, they hired French architect Alban Chambon. He completely revolutionized the space by bringing in the best craftsmen of the era to construct an eclectic wonderland. The reception desk you see today is actually the former bank’s original counter, and the hotel even featured an elevator commissioned from the Edoux company—the very same engineering firm that built the elevators for the Eiffel Tower.

The hotel is also famous for hosting the legendary 1911 Solvay Conference on Physics. This momentous gathering brought together the world’s greatest minds, including Albert Einstein and Marie Curie, to debate the newly emerging theories of quantum mechanics right in the hotel’s meeting rooms.

If that isn’t enough history for you, the Métropole’s bar is also the official birthplace of the Black Russian cocktail, invented in 1949 by bartender Gustave Tops. After closing its doors during the pandemic, the iconic building is currently undergoing a massive restoration project to breathe new life into its historic rooms and reopen its doors as a modern luxury destination.

Location

Recent guest reviews

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