A new book explores Belgian embassies and their architecture

A new book explores Belgian embassies and their architecture

In the introduction of his new book on Belgian embassies, Bram De Maeyer starts by citing a seemingly bland bit of bureaucracy from 2016, when the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs decided to move its embassy to a new location in Washington, DC. ‘An embassy is a building that represents a country abroad,’ begins the edict-like public tender to renovate the premises it had just purchased for its American mission, before continuing, ‘Through this building a country shows itself to the outside world.’

Indeed, as De Maeyer wittily argues, embassies are the most tangible expressions of a nation’s presence abroad: material manifestations of identity, policy, and self-perception. ‘Therefore,’ the Foreign Ministry’s tender continues, ‘it is important that Embassy buildings show a certain style, class without exaggeration, as they are in fact a visit [sic] card of the country in question.’

Cover image - Main entrance of the Belgian ambassadorial residence in New Delhi with its exposed brickwork and lingam-shaped volumes, 1985 (© Massachusetts Institute of Technology, courtesy of Peter Serenyi).

Cover image – Main entrance of the Belgian ambassadorial residence in New Delhi with its exposed brickwork and lingam-shaped volumes, 1985 (© Massachusetts Institute of Technology, courtesy of Peter Serenyi).

(Image credit: Cover image – © Massachusetts Institute of Technology, courtesy of Peter Serenyi)

Explore the finest Belgian embassies and their architecture

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