Discovering this, I decided that I really ought to see some friends I haven't seen in a while but have been meaning to (former residents of Champaign-Urbana, Illinois as well) in Brussels and also see my good friend who is in Lille, France, as she leaves Europe to move back across the ocean soon.
I bought a roundtrip flight through Brussels and also (by walking in to a DeutscheBahn travel center) bought TGV tickets between Brussels and Lille; by (fast) train, it's about 30 minutes.
While waiting at the Brussels airport train station, I noticed this Mannekin-Pis Cola machine. Well. It is a symbol of Brussels.
Here's the view pulling out of the train station. Bears some resemblance to all main train stations I've seen in Europe, I suppose:
| Brussels by train |
[LEUVEN]
I stayed over in Leuven when I arrived and the night I left. My friend D. is a pleasant 5 minute walk from the main train station there, which is a 15 minute train ride to Brussels-National airport.
Leuven is a funny town with sister town Louvain-la-Neuve, which I talked about before (at "case in point...").
I arrived a bit late-ish, so didn't snap many pictures. This is the view from the main train station down towards their cathedral:
The title says "+ September 2012" since I had been to Lille once before, a middle-small-sized town in the Flemish bit of France. It is really a lovely town, and a good blend of Dutch and French sensitivities (French:
2 euros for the best cheddar/brie/etc you'll ever have!
8 euros is 'too much' to pay for a good bottle of wine!
Dutch:
Meat! Beer-y meat!
Delicious beer!
More beer! ;))
I'm also told that despite being in France, people tend to drink beer with meals instead of wine.
That does not keep them from speaking French, however. I was thinking (again) this trip that French is a really "wet" language. Like you always need some reserve spit hanging out in your mouth to properly say words like "rouge".
Lille has made its "name" by being that place where the train dumps you off in France when coming to France from London. Some people just change trains and head on to other places in France. The rest just hang out and go shopping. As a result, there are a lot of people wandering around speaking English, and the staff at the more centrally-located shops tend to speak some English as a result, which is nice as a foreigner.
When arriving in Lille (specifically at the train station Lille Europe), one is greeted by the Eurostar building, which reminds you, in case you didn't know, that the town you're in has a name that begins with the letter "L":
The sort of main square area:
| Those polls show where cars can drive. Confusing the first time through. |
The following is a fantastic example of German-style humor (wordplay):
| Fleur de Lille |
[FOOD IN LILLE:]
My first day in, we met several other math people and went to dinner at Café Leffe. I really enjoyed the "English" menu. I took a picture but it was too dark to be really legible. My favorite items were:
CONCERNING PORC WAY BIG MOTHER about 300 grams. (cote de porc façon grand-mére)
and CRUNCHY OF GOAT (which was a goat cheese and crostini salad, I believe)
The next day, we ate out again after watching a practice job talk, at Les 3 Brasseurs. I had a flammküchen (spelled roughly the same as in German), which is kind of pizza, but with super thin crust. For dessert, I had to try the one that came with a bit of everything (it was all amazingly delicious):
| Coffee + a shot of something + 3 tiny desserts |
French desserts do a good job of being both rich(i.e. fatty) and sweet.
We also ate several times at Exki, which has delicious tarts, quiche, and other healthy-seeming foods. They also have good coffee and free wifi. :)
Other expeditions were made to Le Pain Quotidien, which had nice food and coffee (and wifi), but was much smaller and so a bit cramped.
[SEPTEMBER 2012 IN LILLE:]
I took a day or two to walk around the place. Here's pictures I took along the way.
| Seafoood mural on a seafood restaurant |
This next bit was the main tourist shopping boutique-y area of Lille, in its old town:
| the main tourist shopping area of lille |
This cool mirrored building abuts the end of the canal-formerly-known-as-moat (for the citadel):
| cool mirrored building |
Said moat/canal: I would doubt that there are any real fish inside. It smelled pretty rank (which might have to do with its history as a moat):
| moat/canal with fish graffiti |
| Citadel plaque |
The citadel is still actively militarized, so the best I could do was walk up and take a picture of it from the bridge over the moat:
| "entrance" (although, couldn't really enter) |
Lille has quite a few churches, some of which I just walked by and some which I went inside of.
| Church fenced in by other buildings |
| cool church top |
Also some mosaics which looked like tapestries to me:
The mosaics were also on the floor:
| mosaic-"tapestries" |
| another view of the wall mosaics and niches |
The mosaics were also on the floor:
| probably meant to represent Lille |
Other stuff:
If you walk south(ish) enough, you run into the Port de Lille, pointing Paris-wards (I think):
[Brussels: May 25th]
To Brussels! I've been to Brussels properly once before, in November of 2009 (you can go back and see my pictures here and here (I also saw Amsterdam, Bruges and Ghent on that trip)).
I caught the mid-day-ish TGV/Thalys back to Brussels on Saturday morning.
Since I've done most of the touristy things, I was more interested in chilling out, enjoying the great weather and exploring.
First stop! Food, at this kooky place called "Ozfair"
It was a good example of the kind of multi-use bizarro-zoning place we saw several of later. This place had:
We had the lunch of the day, which was some pretty good soup, nice bread (with butter! Bread never comes with butter in Germany) and some other miscellaneous stuff.
I bought a really cool necklace there:
Around the corner was Hallepoort, which we looked at and into (apparently, it houses the military stuff museum) but didn't pay to enter the museum part:
Since the first trip to Brussels was so wet and my attempt to visit the flea market had been rained on, I wanted to make it this time. That was fun, even though we only saw it for a bit more than half an hour.
| a rather modern window |
| Port de Lille |
To Brussels! I've been to Brussels properly once before, in November of 2009 (you can go back and see my pictures here and here (I also saw Amsterdam, Bruges and Ghent on that trip)).
I caught the mid-day-ish TGV/Thalys back to Brussels on Saturday morning.
Since I've done most of the touristy things, I was more interested in chilling out, enjoying the great weather and exploring.
First stop! Food, at this kooky place called "Ozfair"
| the storefront |
It was a good example of the kind of multi-use bizarro-zoning place we saw several of later. This place had:
- a small cafe-ish-area in the middle.
- The front was (mainly) jewelry.
- The back was some more drygoods-esque stuff, and
- downstairs were clothes.
We had the lunch of the day, which was some pretty good soup, nice bread (with butter! Bread never comes with butter in Germany) and some other miscellaneous stuff.
I bought a really cool necklace there:
| blue! green! yellow-green! teal! |
| Between this and the castle in Ghent, I have learned that Belgium might be the place to go for "castles" |
Since the first trip to Brussels was so wet and my attempt to visit the flea market had been rained on, I wanted to make it this time. That was fun, even though we only saw it for a bit more than half an hour.
View of the square via google streetview:
There were no waffles in sight, but there was a cart selling oysters facing another selling snails.
This is clearly where you go to outfit your cool, trendy apartment in the Brussels-area. All kinds of beautiful plates and cups. Silverware. Do-it-yourself chandeliers. Miscellaneous furniture. Odd appliances. The occasional bicycle. There was also a good bit of clothing and antiques.
This is clearly where you go to outfit your cool, trendy apartment in the Brussels-area. All kinds of beautiful plates and cups. Silverware. Do-it-yourself chandeliers. Miscellaneous furniture. Odd appliances. The occasional bicycle. There was also a good bit of clothing and antiques.
This was one of the weirder things there (oh, Belgium):
All the streets have 2-3 names it seems (Dutch, French, and sometimes another (French?) name additionally). Rue de Renards/ Rue Haute/Rue du Faucon was the street that was on the edge of the plaza and lead upwards, which we walked up afterwards (and had walked down before). It had a lot of cool little shops, including one with some robots in the back.
| on Rue de Renards/ Rue Haute/Rue du Faucon |
| on Rue de Renards/ Rue Haute/Rue du Faucon |
We walked around the corner onto Hoogestraat.
| Pretty buildings |
Also, along the way, some cute family-planning advertising (this was one of several posters, and the one that made me realize the halos were condoms):
| condom-halos; Brussels: where "city planning" is not what you think it means |
On this street, by the place that sold clothes by the kilo (15 euro/kilo) was a place selling kitchen supplies in a similar way:
We stepped into this shop which sold:
- Things you install in your home (e.g. fancy antique windows)
- Stuff to put inside your home (sofas and chairs)
- Clothes
- and also had a cafe area.
| awesome windows above, tables below, and a mannequin with a sign that said the clothes were upstairs |
| looking down at the cafe |
We also came across an American-clothes store with a free in-store blues concert. They said they were part of the Brussels Jazz Marathon that weekend, which then explained the presence of this at Sablon:
Turns out, the cake was delicious (and not a lie). The one on the right is the world-champion-winning recipe:
| Waffle truck!? |
| pretty Belgian square nearish the Grote Markt/Grand Place |
If you didn't know, Tintin (and some other famous comics) originates in Belgium. Thus, random Tintin murals on buildings around the city:
| Tintin! |
To come full circle, we walked through the street I remember which boarders on the Grote Markt/Grand Place, full of almost-identical restaurants all with 18 euro menus, with waiters standing outside, trying to beckon you in:
It was nice to be back in Lille and the Brussels-area. Sadly, much as "Wally" (of Wally's waffles) said, most of the Brussels-area waffles one can get are the "Liege"-style, where "fresh" means that they were made that morning and re-heated when you order them. We did sit down and have a waffle at a restaurant, but it was sadly overcooked. I guess I'll have to go back to Amsterdam for a proper Brussels waffle. ;)
It was nice to be back in Lille and the Brussels-area. Sadly, much as "Wally" (of Wally's waffles) said, most of the Brussels-area waffles one can get are the "Liege"-style, where "fresh" means that they were made that morning and re-heated when you order them. We did sit down and have a waffle at a restaurant, but it was sadly overcooked. I guess I'll have to go back to Amsterdam for a proper Brussels waffle. ;)
Beautiful church in Lille!
ReplyDelete"Oh Belgium," I would say, "your imperialism is showing..."
heh. "city planning." heheh
ReplyDeleteFun post! Looks like a fun trip!
I never suspected the boot-shaped building on top of Lille-Europe could be an "L". Feel stupid now :-)
ReplyDeleteIn all fairness, ivo, Marcy was the one who pointed it out to me :).
Delete