Built in the 14th century, the Namur Gate was one of the seven
city gates of the
second set of defensive walls that enclosed
Brussels. It was originally known as the New Gate of Coudenberg (), to distinguish it from the old gate located in the
first walls, and it used to connect the / (current /) to the / (current /). The gate was renamed for the city of
Namur, now located in
Wallonia, to which the road led. The destruction of the medieval city walls between 1818 and 1840 allowed the creation of a series of wide open boulevards collectively referred to as the
Small Ring. On the site of the former gate, two small pavilion-like buildings (), designed in the
neoclassical style by the architect
Auguste Payen, were built in 1836 to collect the
octroi on merchandise entering the city. The octroi was abolished in 1860, and the buildings were moved three years later to the entrance of the
Bois de la Cambre/Ter Kamerenbos, at the end of the
Avenue Louise/Louizalaan. Removing barriers then permitted the Namur Gate area to develop. In 1866, the pavilions were replaced by the monumental Brouckère Fountain, which was raised in memory of the former
mayor of the City of Brussels,
Charles de Brouckère, designed by the architect
Henri Beyaert and by the sculptors Pierre Dunion and Edouard Fiers. The monument was dismantled in 1955 to allow the rearrangement of boulevards in preparation for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair (
Expo 58). It was reinstalled in
Laeken, on the /, opposite the
King Baudouin Stadium, in 1977. File:Wenceslas Hollar - Brussels (State 1).jpg|17th-century engraving of the walls of Brussels, by
Wenceslas Hollar File:Bruxelles_-_Porte_de_Namur_-_Carte_de_Ferraris.jpg|The Namur Gate marked on the 18th-century
Ferraris map File:Anciens pavillons d'octroi de la Porte de Namur 01.JPG|One of the two former
octroi pavilions of the Namur Gate, now at the entrance of the
Bois de la Cambre/Ter Kamerenbos ==The "Namur Gate" district==