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Concertgebouw Bruges + Amazings Lego

Hartelijk Bedankt

Johan Creytens, the owner of Hotel Heritage, one of the city’s most prestigious addresses, recommends, “It’s always worth checking the cultural calendar for concerts at the Concertgebouw.” And it’s always worth walking the Concertgebouw Circuit. This is a route up ramps inside the building, taking in visual art and sound installations, before climaxing on the roof terrace.

It’s a breath of modernity amidst medieval monuments under the unrelenting regard of the winter sun. On the edge of the historic centre en route to the railway station, Concertgebouw provides an invigorating visitor experience. Ghent architect duo Paul Robbrecht and Hilde Daem won the design competition in 1999 and just three years later the first performance was held in the 1,289 seater concert hall. Paul says, “We definitely didn’t want to build a plush building so we went for concrete to create both acoustics and silence. Massive, solid, heavy. We have no problem with keeping concrete visible: it doesn’t have to be camouflaged.” The concert hall and arts centre in stats: the exterior is clad with 68,000 terracotta tiles and each year 3,000 artists take part in 165 performances in front of 140,000 audience members.

Hilde explains, “The Concertgebouw lives at the intersection of many worlds: the city, the square, nature. Each of its elevations may appear to be different but all of them work together as a whole and share a common feature of transparency. Through their large and small windows, the outside world can look in.” Paul adds, “Our main source of inspiration was historic Bruges. It was a challenge to create a reclining body that had to coexist alongside those venerable city towers, especially the mighty brick tower of the Onze Lieve Vrouwekerk, or Church of Our Lady.”

Georges Rodenbach writes in his 1892 novel Bruges-la-Morte about the “misty labyrinth of the streets of Bruges”. The urban maze between the towers of Bruges is on full show from the roof terrace on top of Concertgebouw. Johan comments, “I was born here and sometimes still discover new buildings or alleys between the landmarks. A landmark isn’t a landmark unless it’s been recreated in Lego. And so Dirk Denoyelle, who runs a team of Lego artists in Flanders called Amazings, has designed a 185 piece Lego set of Concertgebouw. It joins the likes of Ashford Castle (County Mayo), Leadenhall Building (London) and Stadsmuseum (Ghent) in relishing this honour.

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Mount Falcon Sligo + Phantom the Falcon

The First September

The architect James Franklin Fuller sounds like he’d have been good craic at a dinner party. When not bashing out High Victorian melodramatic novels, bragging of his descent from Charlemagne or boasting of his wife’s connections to Napoleon, he was busy embellishing Ireland with a string of rather fetching future tourist attractions. Ashford Castle, Farmleigh, Kylemore Abbey and Park Hotel Kenmare are probably the best known ones.

He also worked on two country houses in the west of Ireland: the design of Mount Falcon and the redesign of Annaghmore. Quite the eclectic, Mr F ensured they’re not wildly similar. The former is asymmetrical and vaguely castellated. The latter is symmetrical and strongly neoclassical. They both have plate glass sash windows and grey stone walls. Fast forward a generation or two: Mount Falcon has had an extension added; Annaghmore, a wing demolished.

Mount Falcon is freeform baronial, an Irish take on a Scottish tradition. All 32 of the bedrooms are available to paying guests (Mount Falcon is now a hotel). Mark Bence-Jones in A Guide to Irish Country Houses calls Annaghmore “late Georgian”.  Esteemed architectural historian Dr Roderick O’Donnell retorts, “It’s lazy to just call Annaghmore ‘late Georgian’. It’s not. The remodelled front elevation is Victorian Greek Revival – the Greek order used is a giveaway.” The house was once joyously named Nymphsfield. Only one of the many bedrooms is available to paying guests (Annaghmore is still a private house).

“A few months after opening my offices I discarded the regulation copying-press and the regulation letter-book,” James Franklin Fuller confessed in his autobiography. “The ‘correct’ thing to do with letters received, was to preserve, docket and to pigeon-hole them… whereas nine out of 10 of them went into my wastepaper basket immediately after receipt . . . I kept no ledgers or books of any sort: I could not see the least necessity for them.” Clearly, admin was beneath him. It’s a wonder that any buildings can be attributed to him, never mind such a variety.

Mount Falcon retains its original internal fittings: cornicing, fireplaces, panelling and even servants’ bells. There are spacious reception rooms but it’s more fun to eat in the intimacy of the square tower: table for two only. Mount Falcon has, aptly, a resident falcon. Phantom is sitting balanced on the back of a chair in the dining room. “Falcons follow a matriarchal pecking order,” explains her falconer. “They respond more respectfully to female humans than males.”

Females play defining roles in the history of Mount Falcon. The house was commissioned by Ultred Knox in honour of his wife Nina Knox-Gore of nearby Belleek Manor. It was completed in 1876. Major and Constance Aldridge bought the estate in 1932 and opened the house as a hunting lodge. Connie was one of the founders of the Blue Book, Ireland’s leading guide to hotels of distinction. In 2002, Mount Falcon was taken over by the current owners, who include the local Maloney family.