The Year of Art Deco 2025, an exceptional result for the attractiveness of Brussels
Monday 02 February 2026
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Ans Persoons, Brussels State Secretary for Urban Planning and Heritage, Rudi Vervoort, Brussels Minister-President, Sarah Lagrillière, Deputy Director General of urban.brussels, Patrick Bontinck, CEO of visit.brussels and Paul Dujardin, Commissioner for the Year of Art Deco 2025 are proud to announce that the Art Deco Year 2025 has been a great success. With more than 755,000 participants, 24 exhibitions in 17 institutions, more than 1,050 guided tours in 19 municipalities, more than 660,000 exhibition visitors and 47 partners involved, the Year of Art Deco 2025 has established itself as one of the Brussels-Capital Region's recent cultural and heritage highlights.
"With over 755,000 visitors, the Art Deco Year 2025 exceeded all expectations. Over and above its status as the "capital of Art Nouveau", we succeeded in positioning Brussels as one of the leading cities for Art Deco on the international stage. By uniting a large number of partners around a common ambition, we are strengthening the cultural, tourist and economic appeal of our region. Brussels is much more than a city of business, it's a city of history. This success is also a reminder of an essential conviction: heritage is a common good, a source of meaning, and our responsibility is to make it alive, accessible and shared by everyone," says Ans Persoons, Brussels Secretary of State for Urban Planning and Heritage.
"The success of this Art Deco year bears witness to our citizens' thirst for culture and beauty. Our ambition was to make this exceptional heritage accessible to all, and the attendance figures show that the gamble paid off. This success also confirms the international appeal of our Region and its positioning as a leading cultural destination. This closure is not the end, but a further step in our mission to promote and protect the architectural jewels that make up the soul of Brussels", says Rudi Vervoort, Brussels Minister-President in charge of Tourism and the Image of Brussels.
An ambitious and committed cultural year
Following the major success of the Year of Art Nouveau in 2023, the Brussels-Capital Region has confirmed its ambitious strategy for showcasing its architectural and cultural heritage in 2025 by dedicating the year to Art Deco, as part of the centenary of the 1925 Paris International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts.
Spearheaded by urban.brussels and visit.brussels, in close collaboration with a wide network of institutional, cultural, associative and municipal partners, the Year of Art Deco offered a fresh take on this emblematic movement of the inter-war period. Beyond the aesthetic and architectural approach, the programme put into perspective the social, economic and cultural contexts of the period, bringing together the issues of modernity, social transformation and crises with contemporary challenges such as sustainable development, the fight against discrimination, the decolonisation of knowledge and intergenerational exchanges.
Key figures revealing a huge response
- More than 755,000 participants and visitors
- 24 exhibitions in 17 museums and institutions
- Over 660,000 visitors to the exhibitions
- More than 1,050 guided tours and city walks, involving more than 37,000 participants
- More than 200 activities as part of Heritage Days 2025 , with over 50,000 visitors
- Several major festivals and events, including the BANAD Festival, Art Deco at Home, the Art Nouveau and Art Deco Objects Fair and Artonov
- 54 complementary events (conferences, screenings, educational activities, festive events), bringing together nearly 7,200 participants
- 47 partners mobilised across the region
" With the Art Deco Year 2025, Brussels confirms its status as both a cultural capital and a European capital. This success is the result of exemplary collective work — and it opens up a new perspective: making heritage a driving force for influence, cohesion and confidence for years to come," says Paul Dujardin, Commissioner for the Art Deco Year 2025.
A rich, decentralised and accessible programme
Exhibitions, festivals, guided tours, lectures, screenings, festive events and publications punctuated the year, taking in iconic Art Deco buildings as well as lesser-known buildings and districts, museums, private venues and public spaces. This geographical decentralisation highlighted the architectural wealth of all 19 communes in the region.
Guided tours were one of the pillars of the programme, offering the public privileged access to places that were sometimes exceptionally open. The Brussels Art Nouveau Art Deco Festival (BANAD), held in March 2025, drew almost 23,000 participants, confirming its major role in promoting Brussels' heritage.
Heritage Days 2025 was one of the highlights of the year, with more than 200 venues and activities, special attention paid to accessibility and increased visibility for all audiences.
The 24 exhibitions organised in a wide range of venues explored Art Deco from a variety of angles - architecture, design, decorative arts, fashion, leisure, gastronomy - and were an outstanding success, with several of them setting attendance records, notably at the Villa Empain, the Maison & Jardins Van Buuren, the Basilique nationale du Sacré-Coeur, the BELvue Museum, Halles Saint-Géry and Train World. The opening of new permanent galleries at the Royal Museums of Art and History also provided a lasting boost to the regional museum offering.
The programme was based on a broad mobilisation of cultural and museum institutions, various associations such as Pro Vélo, ARAU, Arkadia, Korei, Bruxelles Bavard, Itinéraires, the Brussels Art Deco Society, CIVA and numerous partner municipalities, including Anderlecht, Schaerbeek, Forest, Ixelles, Koekelberg, Ganshoren and the City of Brussels. Together, these players have come up with a multilingual and accessible offer, based on a variety of themes: monumental and domestic architecture, public facilities, leisure facilities, industrial heritage and residential districts.
The Year of Art Deco 2025 has also highlighted a series of key sites that are accessible all year round, enabling the public to discover Art Deco independently and continuously. This increased accessibility was reflected in the development of the Art Nouveau Pass, which became the Art Nouveau Art Déco Pass, incorporating several Art Déco venues in addition to the Art Nouveau sites. In 2025, 6,949 passes were sold and scanned 12,840 times, confirming the public's interest in a combined experience and the discovery of emblematic sites throughout the Region.
"We are honoured by the exceptional public interest in the Art Deco gems of our heritage, sometimes subtle and sometimes exuberant, which are the soul and charm of Brussels. The enthusiasm of visitors rewards the work of knowledge, preservation and promotion of heritage undertaken by Urban and its partners. Art Deco Year 2025 is coming to an end, but the efforts to raise awareness of the treasures in our environment will leave a lasting and positive mark," says Sarah Lagrillière, Deputy Director General of Urban.
"We are honoured by the exceptional public interest in the Art Deco gems of our heritage, sometimes subtle and sometimes exuberant, which are the soul and charm of Brussels. The enthusiasm of visitors rewards the work of knowledge, preservation and promotion of heritage undertaken by Urban and its partners. Art Deco Year 2025 is coming to an end, but the efforts to raise awareness of the treasures in our environment will leave a lasting and positive mark," says Sarah Lagrillière, Deputy Director General of urban.brussels
A lasting legacy and prospects beyond 2025
Beyond its quantitative results, Art Deco Year 2025 has generated a significant knock-on effect. Several institutions have seen a marked increase in attendance, and some exhibitions have been extended due to their success. Conferences and guided tours devoted to Art Deco are already scheduled for 2026.
Above all, the Year of Art Deco has encouraged the creation and strengthening of lasting synergies between public institutions, cultural players, associations and local authorities, laying the foundations for long-term collaboration on a regional scale. These dynamics illustrate the relevance of a coordinated approach to heritage, capable on the one hand of raising the profile of Brussels' heritage and passing it on to the general public, and on the other of providing support to players in the cultural, associative and economic sectors by ensuring that its effects are felt over time.
Because Art Nouveau and Art Deco are intrinsically linked to the identity of our city, and are a source of international and cultural attraction, the Brussels Region intends to continue, with all its partners, to promote its heritage treasures in the years to come.
“The Art Deco Year 2025, which was co-organised with urban.brussels, confirmed the strong appeal of this iconic architectural movement in Brussels. The figures speak for themselves. This theme year has enhanced the tourist appeal of our capital, in Belgium as well as internationally. It also highlighted the remarkable commitment of our partners, whose mobilisation made it possible to create a rich programme. This collective momentum confirms Brussels’ unique position as a must-visit destination for everyone who's fond of architecture and heritage,” says Patrick Bontinck, CEO of visit.brussels.
