Josaphat Park | |
---|---|
Type | Public park |
Location | Schaerbeek, Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium |
Coordinates | 50°51′44″N 4°23′06″E / 50.86222°N 4.38500°E |
Area | 20 ha (49 acres) |
Created | 1901 |
Josaphat Park (French: Parc Josaphat, Dutch: Josaphatpark) is a public park of 20 ha (49 acres) located in the municipality of Schaerbeek in Brussels, Belgium. The football stadium that was formerly used by the K.V.V. Crossing Elewijt lies on the north-western corner of the park. There is also an elementary school (Chazal school), a tennis club (R.T.C. Lambermont), the municipal greenhouses, animals (horses, donkeys, hen, ducks), two playgrounds, a minigolf course, an archery range, three cafés (La Laiterie, La Buvette Saint-Sebastiaan, and La Guinguette Populeir), a kiosk (Josaphine's), and some ponds.
The park is a remainder of the old Linthout forest that began at the Place Dailly/Daillyplein. It was designed by Edmond Galoppin of Melsbroek and inaugurated by King Leopold II on 6 June 1904. Its name comes from the resemblance between the valley of the Roodebeek (a tributary of the Maelbeek), where the park is located, and the Valley of Josaphat in the Holy Land, noted by a pilgrim back from Palestine in 1574. It was designated on 31 December 1974.
Sculptures
Josaphat Park contains a large collection of sculptures, including works by sculptors Jules Lagae, Victor Rousseau, Albert Desenfans, Joseph Van Hamme, Edmond Lefever, and Jean Lecroart.
- Bronze medallion with Edmond Galoppin's effigy by Jean Lecroart
- Boreas by Joseph Van Hamme
- The Pruner by Albert Desenfans
- Cinderella by Edmond Lefever
- Eve and the serpent by Desenfans
See also
External links
- Media related to Parc Josaphat at Wikimedia Commons
- Description on the website of the Belgian Tourist Board