Brussels: History, Design, and Urban Vision
- menabonicola
- Sep 1
- 1 min read

In Brussels, the bicycle isn't just a means of transportation: it's a code, a shared language that runs through the city. Cycle paths crisscross the city, connecting neighborhoods and institutions, historic squares and creative hubs. Pedaling becomes a daily, natural, almost instinctive gesture.
Here, the bike is more than just speed: it's a cargo carrier that carries children to school, goods to shops, and ideas through the streets. It's a tool for work and community, a tangible symbol of forward-looking mobility without sacrificing beauty. Cycling culture is palpable in every corner: in the bike cafes where the community meets, in the concept stores that transform the bike into design, in the urban details that speak of a living passion.
And then there are the legends: Eddy Merckx and Wout Van Aert, two names that embody the legend and the present of a country that lives for cycling. A passion that explodes every spring in the Northern Classics, amid cobblestones and iconic walls, in wind and rain. The Ronde van Vlaanderen and Liège-Bastogne-Liège are more than just races: they are collective rituals, the cultural heritage of a people who see the bicycle as their identity. For Veloverse Studio, Brussels is an open laboratory: a city that teaches us to think of the bicycle as an urban project, a social symbol, and an aesthetic object. Here, every pedal stroke is not just movement, but an act that shapes the future.
Riding with Vision


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