Rue d'Aerschot

Rue d'Aerschot (French) or Aarschotstraat (Dutch) is a street in the Schaerbeek municipality of Brussels, Belgium. It is known as a hotspot of the city's underground nightlife and famous for its brothels. The street is also known for its inexpensive lodging.

Rue d'Aerschot (in French)
Aarschotstraat (in Dutch)
Rear of the Church of Saints John and Nicholas on Rue d'Aerschot
Former name(s)Rue de Cologne[1]
LocationSchaerbeek, Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium
Coordinates50°51′46.28″N 4°21′49.18″E
Construction
Construction startc.1839[2]
Other
Known forBrussels-North railway station
Window prostitution

Rue d'Aerschot is close to Brussels' city centre, and is adjacent to the financial and business district, where the Brussels World Trade Center is located. The street is located on the edge of the Turkish Quarter,[3] and next to Brussels-North Station, one of the three main train stations in Brussels. The station's buildings and tracks occupy the whole western side of the street. The rear entrance of the neoclassical Church of Saints John and Nicholas is also located on the street.

History

Rue d'Aerschot was built around 1839 when the North Station was constructed and the surrounding streets developed.[2] The station was originally called Gare de Cologne,[2] and the street Rue de Cologne.[1]

After World War I, due to strong anti-German feelings in Belgium, many streets which were named after German towns or cities were renamed. The street was renamed Rue d'Aerschot after the town in Brabant which had suffered heavily in the conflict.[1]

The station was rebuilt in 1953 and renamed Gare du Nord. Following the Brussels World's Fair in 1958, a major plan was devised to rebuild the Northern Quarter – the so-called "Manhattan Project".[2][4] Work started to the west of the station, including the World Trade Center, in the 1960s.[2][4] Bankruptcy in the early 1970s prevented the implementation of the scheme to the east of the station, including Rue d'Aerschot.[4]

Prostitution

A portion of the street, with red lights and prostitutes visible.

Prostitution in the Rue d'Aerschot is known to have existed before World War I.[1] In modern times, it has become the main red-light district in Brussels and has many "windows" that scantily dressed prostitutes sit in trying to attract trade. Most of the girls are Romanian or Bulgarian.[5]

In the 1990s, the area was controlled by Albanian pimps. There was often violence between rival pimps and girls complained to the police that the pimps were abusing and exploiting them. There was a crackdown and the criminal networks were broken down.[5]

The area is now controlled by Romanian and Bulgarian pimps. Each window has a madam who controls the prostitutes that work there. The madam takes 50% of the prostitute's earnings. Madams were traditionally older Belgium prostitutes but these have been replaced with mainly Bulgarian women who work for the pimps. This allows the pimps to stay out of the area and away from police attention. Often they remain in their home country.[5]

Although widely tolerated by police and local authorities, this neighbourhood has at times been a target of joint government/police efforts to track down human trafficking operatives, mostly aimed at breaking up criminal networks that lure young women from central and eastern European countries with the promise of a better life in Western Europe.

Non-profit associations also operate in the area, mainly women's groups providing support and counseling to prostitutes.

See also

References

  1. d'Othée, François Janne (2016). Brussels : Not your ordinary city (in French). Nevicata. ISBN 978-2875231055.
  2. "FROM PLACE SOLVAY TO PLACE GAUCHERET, INTERMINGLING AND REBIRTH OF AN AREA" (PDF). Schaerbeek. 11 October 2011. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  3. De Vries, André (August 2008). Brussels: A Cultural and Literary History. Signal Books. p. 247. ISBN 978-1904955474.
  4. DEN TANDT, CHRISTOPHE (August 2002). "Brussels's "Manhattan Project:"The International Style and the Americanization of European Urban Space". Université Libre de Bruxelles. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  5. Reinschmidt, Lena (June 2016). "Prostitution in Belgium: federal legislation and regulation at the local level" (PDF). Observatory for Sociopolitical Developments in Europe. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
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