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Joseph Poelaert

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Nationality
  
Belgian

Occupation
  
Architect


Name
  
Joseph Poelaert

Role
  
Architect

Joseph Poelaert httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
21 March 1817
Brussels, Belgium

Died
  
November 3, 1879, Brussels, Belgium

Buildings
  
Justice Palace, Congress Column, Church of Our Lady of Laeken

Structures
  
Justice Palace, Congress Column, Church of Our Lady of Laeken, La Monnaie - Brussels

Palais de Justice, Brussels


Joseph Poelaert (21 March 1817 – 3 November 1879) was a Belgian architect.

Contents

Joseph Poelaert Joseph Poelaert Wikipedia

Life

Born in Brussels to Philip Poelaert (1790–1875), a former architecture student at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, Poelaert also trained there under Tilman-François Suys, and then in Paris under Louis Visconti and Jean-Nicolas Huyot.

Poelaert first came to attention with his winning competition entry for the Congress Column in 1849. He was made city architect of Brussels in 1856.

Poelaert's most significant commission was the colossal Law Courts of Brussels, the largest single building constructed in the 19th Century and even copied in smaller scale at the Palace of Justice in Peru.

During construction the inhabitants of the Marollen quarter, the working-class neighbourhood site of the Law Courts, gave Poelaert the nickname “Skieven Architect” (roughly, ‘the crooked architect’) because the long period of construction drove many inhabitants out of their houses, with the help of the local police. The nickname refers also to "chief architect" because many of the workers of the Law Courts were English. The local inhabitants corrupted "chief architect" to "skieven architect", with a totally different meaning in the Brussels dialect.

Poelaert himself was residing in the heart of the Marolles rue des Minimes in a house adjoining his vast offices and workshops and communicating with them.

Poelaert Place, the largest square in Brussels, lies before the courts building.

He is buried in Laeken Cemetery under a miniature version of his own Palais de Justice. Poelaert was the great-uncle of Belgian architect Henri Van Dievoet.

Works

  • the Congress Column, 1850–1859
  • the church Sainte-Cathérine/Kathelijnkerk in Brussels, 1854–1874
  • the Church of Our Lady of Laeken, site of the Royal Crypt of the Belgian royal family, begun 1854, consecrated in 1872, completed 1909
  • restoration of the Théatre Royal de la Monnaie, Brussels, after the fire of 1855
  • Law Courts of Brussels, 1866–1883
  • References

    Joseph Poelaert Wikipedia