Hotel in Brussels, Belgium
Juliana Hotel Brussels
1,275ptsNeoclassical Art-Boutique Residence

About Juliana Hotel Brussels
Juliana Hotel Brussels occupies a restored neoclassical building on the Place des Martyrs, one of Brussels' most architecturally composed squares. With 37 rooms and six suites across three floors, the property operates at boutique scale, pairing serious design credentials — Philippe Starck, Le Corbusier-inspired murals, a private art collection — with an Italian restaurant and a spa anchored by a tiled indoor pool.
A Square That Sets the Tone
Place des Martyrs is not Grand-Place. It draws fewer crowds, earns fewer photographs, and appears on fewer itineraries — which is precisely what gives it its character. The square's colonnaded neoclassical facades form one of Brussels' most architecturally coherent public spaces, and arriving at the Juliana Hotel means approaching through that composition rather than past it. The hotel's luminous white facade reads as a continuation of the square's civic grandeur, not a departure from it. That relationship between building and setting matters: it frames what the Juliana does well, which is offer a boutique experience at a scale that larger Brussels addresses cannot replicate.
Brussels' central hotel market splits, broadly, between large-footprint internationals and smaller design-led independents. The Juliana sits firmly in the latter category, with 37 rooms and six suites distributed across three floors — a count that keeps the property residential in atmosphere even as its amenities reach well into the luxury tier. For a comparison point, the Corinthia Grand Hotel Astoria Brussels and Steigenberger Wiltcher's operate at a scale that prioritises ceremony; the Juliana prioritises discretion.
Design as a Considered Position
Luxury boutique hotels in European capitals increasingly use art and design as a point of differentiation, and the Juliana takes that approach seriously enough that the curation functions more like a private collection than a decorative afterthought. A Philippe Starck mirror appears in the public spaces; a corridor takes its visual cues from Hermès; the stairwell carries a 1930s-style iron railing that holds its own against the neoclassical bones of the building. The bar's mural, by father-and-son artists Kelvin and Philip Lavergne, occupies the same space as a bronze and copper-toned interior where gold velvet couches and a statue of Theseus and the minotaur share the room without competing. The spa pool, faced in intricate tilework and ringed by murals drawn from the vocabulary of Le Corbusier, is the kind of space that warrants the detour on its own terms.
The six room types , from Prestige Rooms to the Signature and Juliana Suites , each carry a distinct palette and architectural identity. The Signature Suite reads around original dark wooden beams set against golden hardwood and pale walls, with a marble bathroom that includes a soaking tub lit from above by a skylight. The Juliana Suite takes a softer register: seafoam walls, cool gray sofas, and an infrared sauna alongside the deep bathtub and rain shower in an all-marble bathroom. No two rooms present the same shape or art program, which is a meaningful commitment in a property of this size. Molton Brown bath products and a Nespresso coffee maker appear across all categories , the kind of baseline that signals a consistent position on comfort rather than leaving it to room tier.
Service at This Scale
The guest experience at a 43-room hotel is fundamentally different from what larger Brussels properties can deliver. The Hotel Amigo, a Rocco Forte Hotel, and the Sofitel Brussels Europe carry the service infrastructure of their respective groups, which has its own logic. At the Juliana, the boutique count means that staff-to-guest ratios remain high without requiring the formal protocol structures of a larger operation. The hotel's design-led identity also shapes how service reads: the spaces invite engagement , whether at the bar, in the spa, or at Fisco, the in-house restaurant , rather than routing guests through standardised sequences. That distinction tends to matter most for travellers who find large-lobby hotel culture inert, and least for those who want the assurance of a recognised international brand.
Fisco: Italian Cooking in a Brussels Context
In a city whose restaurant culture tends toward French-Belgian formality at the upper end, an in-house Italian restaurant operated by a named chef represents a considered programming decision. Fisco serves dinner daily under chef Rosa Caldarola, with a menu that rotates every few months and daily specials built around local and seasonal produce. Dishes on record include millefoglie di polenta, pumpkin crème brûlée with mushrooms, parmesan croquettes, and monkfish ballotine with saffron cream , a range that sits between Italian technique and Belgian seasonal logic rather than defaulting to either tradition wholesale. The bar, with its craft cocktails, champagne, and small bites, operates as a distinct venue within the property, worth visiting independently of a dinner booking. For a broader picture of where to eat around the city, see our full Brussels restaurants guide.
Wellness and the Indoor Pool
The spa operates as a full-service offering: massages, facials, hairdressing, manicures, sauna, steam room, and gym access, in addition to the tiled indoor pool. For a central Brussels hotel at this room count, that amenity depth is substantial. The pool's Le Corbusier-referencing murals make it one of the more architecturally composed wellness spaces in the city's boutique tier , a claim that holds up against comparable properties including The Dominican and La Plaza Brussels.
Location and Planning
Place des Martyrs sits in the lower town, within walking distance of the Grand-Place, the Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert, and the city's main commercial axis. The square itself is quieter than the surrounding streets, which contributes to the sense of seclusion that the hotel's 37-room scale reinforces. For travellers arriving by train, Brussels-Central is the most proximate station. The hotel's address at Pl. des Martyrs 1/4, 1000 Brussels, places it within the first postal district, meaning it is accessible on foot from most central arrival points.
Brussels rewards extended stays, and the Juliana's size means it fills at pace during EU summit periods and major trade events, when the city's central hotel supply tightens considerably. Guests planning around those windows should factor lead time into their booking. Those looking at alternatives in the immediate area include Radisson Collection Hotel, Grand Place Brussels and Hotel Agora Brussels Grand Place in Pl De Brouckere, both of which operate at larger scale closer to the Grand-Place. For design-led boutique alternatives elsewhere in Belgium, Hotel Julien in Antwerp, B&B The Verhaegen in Ghent, and Boutiquehotel 't Fraeyhuis in Bruges represent a comparable philosophy applied to different city contexts. For those extending travel beyond Belgium, Domaine La Butte aux Bois in Lanaken, Chateau de Vignée in Rochefort, and Domaine du Château de Modave in Modave offer contrasting formats in the Belgian countryside. International comparisons at a similar design-led boutique scale include The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City and Aman Venice in Venice.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the vibe at Juliana Hotel Brussels?
- The atmosphere is quiet and design-conscious rather than social or scene-driven. The hotel's position on Place des Martyrs , Brussels' most composed neoclassical square , reinforces a sense of seclusion, and the 37-room count keeps the interior calm. The bar and restaurant add warmth and draw, but neither operates as a destination for non-guests in the way that larger Brussels hotel bars do. The Google rating of 4.5 across 363 reviews suggests that guests consistently find the experience matches its positioning.
- What's the most popular room type at Juliana Hotel Brussels?
- The six room styles each carry distinct architecture, art, and color programs, so preference tends to track specific aesthetic rather than a single dominant category. The Signature Suite, with its original dark wooden beams, marble bathroom, and skylight-lit soaking tub, represents the property's most architecturally distinctive space. The Juliana Suite adds an infrared sauna and a separate living configuration for those prioritising suite amenities over the drama of the roofline.
- What's the defining thing about Juliana Hotel Brussels?
- The combination of boutique scale , 37 rooms and six suites , with a serious, curated design program is what separates the Juliana from larger Brussels addresses. Works by Philippe Starck and the Lavergne father-and-son duo, alongside Le Corbusier-referencing spa murals and a private art collection distributed through the rooms, give the property a coherent aesthetic identity that holds up across all areas of the hotel rather than concentrating in the lobby alone.
- Do I need a reservation for Juliana Hotel Brussels?
- For the hotel itself, advance booking is advisable given the 37-room count. Brussels' central hotel supply tightens during EU institutional activity, trade events, and major conferences, and properties at this scale fill ahead of those periods. For Fisco, the in-house Italian restaurant serving dinner daily, a reservation is recommended to secure a table, particularly on weekends. Contact details for bookings are leading confirmed directly via the hotel's official channels.
- Does Juliana Hotel Brussels have a restaurant, and what kind of food does it serve?
- Fisco, the hotel's in-house restaurant, serves Italian food under chef Rosa Caldarola, with dinner available daily. The menu rotates every few months, and daily specials are built around locally sourced seasonal ingredients , a format that bridges Italian cooking traditions with Belgian market produce. Documented dishes include monkfish ballotine with saffron cream and pumpkin crème brûlée with mushrooms, reflecting a range that goes beyond standard hotel-restaurant programming. The bar operates as a separate space, offering craft cocktails and champagne alongside small bites in a dramatically designed room with copper and bronze tones.
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