Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/sub-municipalities-of-ghent

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Gentbrugge

Sub-municipality of the city of Ghent, Belgium


Summary

Sub-municipality of the city of Ghent, Belgium

FieldValue
nameGentbrugge
settlement_typeSub-municipality of Ghent
image_skylineGentbrugge - Sint-Simon en Judaskerk 4.jpg
image_captionChurch of Saint Simon and Saint Jude
image_shieldBlason ville be Gentbrugge.svg
mapframeyes
image_map1GentbruggeLocation.svg
map_caption1Location of Gentbrugge in Ghent
pushpin_mapBelgium#Belgium East Flanders
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Community
subdivision_name1Flemish Community
subdivision_type2Region
subdivision_name2Flemish Region
subdivision_type3Province
subdivision_name3East Flanders
subdivision_type4Arrondissement
subdivision_name4Ghent
subdivision_type5Municipality
subdivision_name5Ghent
coordinates
area_total_km27.86
population_as_of2020-01-01
population_total15957
population_density_km2auto
postal_code_typePostal codes
postal_code9050
area_code_typeArea codes
area_code09

Gentbrugge (; ) is a sub-municipality of the city of Ghent located in the province of East Flanders, Flemish Region, Belgium. It was a separate municipality until 1977. On 1 January 1977, it was merged into Ghent.

Neighborhoods

The sub-municipality of Gentbrugge itself has been divided in four neighborhoods: Dries, Sportplein, Coninxdonk and the rural area Zwarte Fles with a population of 3417, 3653, 268 and 6 respectively in 2008.

Demographic facts

  • Between 1999 and 2008, the population grew by 2,1% as compared to 7,1 for Ghent entirely
  • The average age is 9 to 42 years
  • The number of non-Belgian inhabitants is with 3,7% lower than the average of Ghent (10,01%)

Gentbrugse Meersen

The Gentbrugse Meersen is a rural area of 270ha surrounded by urbanized Gentbrugge to the West, the Scheldt river in the East, and parted in the middle by the E17 freeway. It is being developed by the City of Ghent to an area for nature development/conservation and recreation.

It is home to the Gentbrugse Meersen Cricket club. In June 2022, it was announced that the venue would host the first two Twenty20 International (T20I) matches in June 2022, between Belgium and Malta.

Places of interest

  • Rattendaelepark. A historical park, now for recreational use. From the Castle Vilain named after its first owner Albijn Vilain (1619). Only a tower remains.
  • The water tower, visible when entering Ghent by the E17 highway from Antwerp. Originally from 1937 and colorfully repainted in 1990 by the Ghent artist Chris Demangel.
  • Gentbrugge used to host the stadium of the Belgian first league football club, KAA Gent, also known as La Gantoise. Now the football club resides over at the Ghelamco Arena in the city of Ghent.
  • The St. Eligius Church near the Brusselsesteenweg. Originally neo-gothic from 1884, but expanded in art-deco style in 1937 by the architect W. Vandenbogaerde.
  • The castle Coninxdonck, built in the 19th century to replace a medieval castle.
  • The Administrative Center. An example of sixties functionalism designed by the Belgian architect Paul Felix in 1973.

File:Braemkasteel Gentbrugge 12-01-2010 14-42-35.JPG|The File:Toren kasteel Vilain Rattendaelepark 13-04-2010 14-55-34.JPG|Tower Castle Vilain File:Kasteel de Pélichy2 - 2016 - Gentbrugge.jpg|View of the File:Gentbrugge - Kasteel de Oude Kluis 27-7-2016 11-44-19.JPG|

Sports

Gentbrugge used to have the stadium (Jules Ottenstadion) of the First Class-team KAA Gent, also known as La Gantoise. The final tribune of the stadium got demolished in June 2014. Since then, La Gantoise resides at the Ghelamco arena near the U.Z. clinic in Ghent. There are some tennis courts in Gentbrugge of a team which is also called La Gantoise, besides the hockey team.

There's also another football team in Ghent, which played its games in the Emanuel Hielstadium. This team was created on 1 April 1899 when the teams Athletic Club Gantois, Sport Pédestre Gantois, and Football Club Gantois merged and became a member of the UBSSA as Racing Club de Gand. In the period before 2010, this team has changed its name after some later developments into KRC-Gent-Zeehaven and it plays its matches in Oostakker. The fields in Gentbrugge have accommodated athletics from 2010 in order to give a suitable training field to the Racing Club Gent for Athletics.

References

References

  1. "LISTE ALPHABETIQUE DES COMMUNES - Fusions de 1963 à 1977".
  2. Wijkmonitor Stad Gent 2009
  3. "Gentbrugse Meersen - Cricket clubs". Gentinfo.
  4. (9 June 2022). "Cricket Belgium host Malta Men's team for T20I series in July 2022". czarSports.
  5. "Sint-Eligius - Gent (Gentbrugge)".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Gentbrugge — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report