Haren, Belgium

Haren (Dutch and French, sometimes written Haeren in French) is an old municipality of Brussels in Belgium, that was merged into the municipality of the City of Brussels in 1921. It is an outlying part of the municipality of the city and is situated at the north-eastern edge of the Brussels Capital Region. In contrast to most of Brussels, Haren has been remaining nearly as much Dutch-speaking as French-speaking and has preserved a somewhat rural appearance.

The church of St Elizabeth in the centre of Haren

Pronunciation

  • Dutch: [ˈɦaːrə(n)] (listen)
  • French [aˈʁɛn]

Sites

Haren has three railway stations, Buda (formerly called Haren-Buda) on line 25 between Brussels and Antwerp, Haren (formerly called Haren-Linde) on line 26 between Halle and Vilvoorde, and Haren Zuid/Sud on the line 36 BrusselsLeuven. The marshalling yard of the National Railway Company of Belgium, sometimes referred to as "Schaarbeek Vorming", is largely located on the territory of Haren municipality.

Haren's postal code is 1130.

Haren is host to the headquarters of NATO, EUROCONTROL, as well as those of many large international companies.

The first Brussels airport was also located in Haren, between 1914 and the early 1950s. The site, which was later used by the Belgian Air Force, is serves since 2018 as the new NATO HQ, previously located 20 kilometers South. The current Brussels Airport site is located several kilometres to the east.

Between 1932 and 1997 Haren was the location of a Renault automobile factory, which in 1969, for the first time, produced more than 100,000 cars in a single year. At that time it was concentrating on the assembly of Renault 4 and Renault 6 models, mostly for sale in Benelux, Germany and Scandinavia.[1] Renault also assembled AMC's Rambler automobiles there for sale in European markets.[2]

References

  1. "News and Views: Renault in Belgium". Autocar. 133 (nbr3855): 32. 1 January 1970.
  2. Billeter, Vera (1965). Logoz, Arthur (ed.). "The American Motors Story". Auto-Universum 1966 (English Edition). Zürich, Switzerland: Verlag International Automobile Parade. IX: 17.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.