
Brussels Residents Master Meal Prep: Save Time, Eat Healthy
Discover how Brussels' residents are prioritizing healthy eating despite hectic schedules, with innovative solutions and local resources.
Latest news from Brussels.

Discover how Brussels' residents are prioritizing healthy eating despite hectic schedules, with innovative solutions and local resources.
From Woluwe to the Bois de la Cambre, a growing number of Bruxellois are turning their morning dog walks into full-blown social workout sessions.
As demand for sleep medicine grows across Europe, Brussels residents have more options than ever — but navigating the system takes some homework.
Discover how local sleep clinics in Brussels are helping residents improve their sleep health and overall lifestyle wellness
From Ixelles to Saint-Gilles, the Belgian capital's most nutritionist-endorsed spots are rewriting what it means to eat well in the city.
From the Bois de la Cambre to the Laeken park circuit, Brussels residents are turning their daily dog walks into structured group workouts — and the science says it's working.
Brussels residents are struggling with sleep health, but local initiatives and experts offer solutions to improve lifestyle wellness
Discover the city's most family-friendly bike paths and outdoor fitness spots, perfect for a fun and healthy day out

Discover the flavors of Brussels with these easy and healthy recipes featuring fresh produce from the region's markets and farms.
Understanding the benefits and drawbacks of daytime sleeping for Brussels' active residents
Discover the benefits of fermented foods for your gut health and where to find them in Brussels
Discover the lesser-known parks and outdoor fitness spots that Brussels residents cherish, from the Bois de la Cambre to the Parc de Woluwe.

City Hall is pressing ahead with a sweeping audit of its visual identity archives, but the toughest calls on what stays, what goes, and who decides are still ahead.

City administrators must now choose how, where, and at what cost to replace duplicated artworks and imagery in Brussels' public spaces — and the clock is ticking.

From Ixelles to Molenbeek, community members say the same outdated photos keep appearing across official Brussels platforms, eroding trust in local communications.

City archivists and municipal web teams have spent the past week quietly overhauling how Brussels documents itself — pulling thousands of repeated photographs from public-facing databases and replacing them with verified, original imagery.

A growing backlog of redundant photographs and scanned documents is straining storage budgets and slowing public access across the capital's cultural institutions.

A decade of piecemeal digital commissioning left city websites riddled with duplicate and placeholder imagery; here is how that happened.