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What are the places to visit in Belgium?

Brussels Brussels

Brussels is the largest city in Belgium and the headquarters of NATO and the European Union. Brussels has the most exquisite buildings and museums in Europe, and skyscrapers and medieval buildings complement each other. The whole city is centered on the palace and built along the Roland Forest, which is full of artistic flavor. The former rulers left here large and small luxury buildings and palaces. Many streets still have houses of different centuries, from the Renaissance to the French Art Nouveau period to the neoclassical style. Walking on that road is like walking in the just visiting.

Brussels is also a bourgeois city, and the middle class loves food and pursues the quality of life. Restaurants and cafes have their own characteristics and are constantly innovating. Besides luxury chocolate and hundreds of kinds of beer, waffles and white wine boiled mussels and French fries are people's favorite choices to try. As the animation capital, it is the hometown of Tintin and Smurfs. Artists painted various local cartoon images on the external walls of buildings, which became a striking and beautiful scenic line on the streets of Brussels.

Blue forest blue forest

Just 30 minutes away from the south of Brussels, there is a forest called Hallebus, which is a place that few tourists know. Most forests are beech trees. Every year when hyacinthus orientalis comes, it will turn into a sea of blue and purple flowers, like a fairy's residence. Wild hyacinthus orientalis has laid a carpet on the ground, which makes people cry. The ethereal atmosphere inherent in the forest adds a bit of mystery to it, as if it had entered a dream.

Bruges Bruges

Bruges is a city with water. In Bruges, there are many rivers everywhere, and people can't help but sigh that this is Little Venice. Bruges gives people a feeling of retro, because many of the architectural styles here are medieval Gothic architectural styles, and many buildings are still left over from the Middle Ages. Traveling by boat on the river in Bruges, looking at the medieval-style buildings on both sides of the strait, feels like traveling through time and space to a medieval fairy tale world. No wonder people praised it as "the Pearl of Flanders".