In this Book

Building for Belgium: Belgian Embassies in a Globalising World (1945-2020)

Book
2025
summary

How Belgium's decentralised embassy building programme highlights the collaborative nature and diplomatic significance of embassy architecture.

Embassy buildings are the most tangible evidence of a state’s diplomatic presence abroad. State authorities have invested in the architectural conception of purpose-built embassies to flex their diplomatic muscle and project nationhood on foreign soil. While scholars have primarily focused on purpose-built embassies of (former) world powers, Building for Belgium shifts the perspective by scrutinising the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ embassy-building programme from 1945 to 2020.

Rather than a conventional political assessment of diplomatic relations, the book foregrounds the often-overlooked architectural lives of embassies and their social, economic, and political entanglements. By examining Belgian embassy projects across all continents, it reveals how the Belgian diplomatic corps has navigated diverse political regimes, geopolitical contexts, cultures, and building codes. More than the outcome of a deliberate policy, the embassy-building programme has been shaped by incidental decisions, private ambitions and personal tastes of Belgian diplomats, ministry officials and politicians.

Building for Belgium not only sheds light on diplomatic architecture but also connects domestic conversations about architecture in Belgium with global state-building projects. Offering fresh insights into the politics of space, it will be of value to scholars and practitioners in architecture, urban studies, international relations, cultural heritage, and Belgian and European studies.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title

pp. 1-2

Title

pp. 3

Copyright

pp. 4

Dedication

pp. 5-6

Table of Contents

pp. 7-8

Foreword by Mark Eyskens

pp. 9-10

Acknowledgments

pp. 11-12

Abbreviations

pp. 13

Notes regarding the maps and the monetary values used in the book

pp. 14-16

Introduction

pp. 17-36

Chapter I. The Ambassador’s Agency: The Head of Mission as Project Developer (1945-1957)

pp. 37-96

Chapter II. Building Embassies on Demand: The Steering Role of the Receiving State (1958-1974)

pp. 97-166

Chapter III. “It’s the Economy, Stupid!”: Constructing Embassies as Venues for Economic Diplomacy (1980-1985)

pp. 167-232

Chapter IV. Plugging the Holes in the Federal Budget: Monetising the Belgian Embassy Patrimony (1999-2020)

pp. 233-306

Epilogue

pp. 307-312

Notes

pp. 313-328

Bibliography

pp. 329-338

Illustration Credits

pp. 339-342

Index

pp. 343-348
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