Maison Art-Nouveau d'exception au coeur du quartier Molière
Ixelles
Ground floor: +/-165m2
First hall
Second hall - access to kitchen
Cloakroom - toilet - lift
Front office
Clearance and access to ornamental marble staircase
To the rear, dining room with access to the garden
1st floor :
Reception floor with a beautiful library lounge on the front facade - adjoining reception rooms - pantry with additional kitchen.
2nd floor and basement :
Master bedroom with dressing room and bathroom
hallway
2nd bedroom with shower room
3rd floor :
3rd bedroom with shower room
4th bedroom with shower room
Solarium on flat roof
Basements: cellar; boiler room; laundry room - fitness area
Garage: accessed via the garden and rue Berkendael
Monuments and sites:
Situated within a remarkable enfilade running from no. 144 to no. 182, this remarkable house is in the geometric Art Nouveau style, 1910. It was built at the request of Arts et Manufactures engineer Bruno Schmidt, to the plans of architect Jean-Baptiste Dewin, who designed it down to the last detail.
It is a comprehensive work, as conceived by the great architects of the Art Nouveau period.
The façade is characterised by J.-B. Dewin's highly personal and innovative style, recognisable by its geometric forms inspired by the Viennese Secession, and by the refinement of its decoration, which is also present on the interior. The decorations are a particularly good illustration of the architect's mastery of detail: mosaics featuring geometric motifs and a beautiful bestiary of stylised insects (bees, dragonflies) and birds (storks, falcons), found at the height of the ironwork and stained glass windows. Animals, particularly those related to mythology (the falcon representing the Egyptian deity Horus, etc.), were omnipresent in Dewin's work of the same period.