Mini-Europe

Mini-Europe

Location Brussels, Belgium
Coordinates 50°53′38″N 4°20′20″E / 50.894°N 4.339°ECoordinates: 50°53′38″N 4°20′20″E / 50.894°N 4.339°E
Opened 1989
Operating season March - October
Website www.minieurope.eu

Mini-Europe is a miniature park located in Bruparck at the foot of the Atomium in Brussels, Belgium. Mini-Europe has reproductions of monuments in the European Union on show, at a scale of 1:25. Roughly 80 cities and 350 buildings are represented. Mini-Europe receives 350,000 visitors per year and has a turnover of 4 million Euros.

The park contains live action models such as trains, mills, an erupting Mount Vesuvius, and cable cars. A guide gives the details on all the monuments. At the end of the visit, the “Spirit of Europe” exhibition gives an interactive overview of the European Union in the form of multimedia games.

The park is built on an area of 24,000 m². The initial investment was of €10 million in 1989, on its inauguration by Prince Philip of Belgium.

Building the monuments

The monuments were chosen for the quality of their architecture or their European symbolism. Most of the monuments were made using moulds. The final copy used to be cast from epoxy resin, but now polyester is used. Three of the monuments were made out of stone (e.g. the tower of Pisa, in marble). A computer-assisted milling procedure was used for two of the models.

After painting the monument was installed on site, together with decorations and lighting. The Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela required more than 24,000 hours of work.

Many of the monuments were financed by European countries or regions. The Brussels Grand-Place model cost €350,000 to make.

The gardens

Ground cover plants, dwarf trees, bonsais and grafted trees are used alongside miniature monuments, and the paths are adorned with bushes and flowers.


List of models

Site from the Atomium
Brussels Square
Houses of Parliament
Arc de Triomphe and Sacré Cœur
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

    Austria

    Belgium

    Bulgaria

    Croatia

    Cyprus

    Czech Republic

    • Prague Orloj

    Denmark

    Estonia

    • Great Coastal Gate and Fat Margaret's Tower, Tallinn

    Finland

    France

    Germany

    Greece

    Hungary

    • Széchenyi Bath

    Ireland

    Italy

      Latvia

      • Freedom Monument, Riga

      Lithuania

      Luxembourg

      Malta

      Netherlands

      Poland

      Portugal

      Romania

      Slovakia

      Slovenia

      Spain

      Sweden

      United Kingdom

      Other

      See also

      External links

      Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mini-Europe.

      References