Exterior The church's façade and
portico, with its triangular
pediment and its
peristyle of six
Corinthian columns, evoke the appearance of a
Greco-Roman temple. The primitive
bas-relief of the pediment representing
The Sacrifice of the Mass by Adrien Joseph Anrion, destroyed in 1797, was replaced in 1815 by
The Eye of Conscience. It was once again replaced in 1851 by the current coloured fresco by
Jean Portaels depicting, on a gold background,
The Consoling Virgin of the Afflicted. Two colossal statues from the end of the 18th century, on a high cylindrical base, frame the portico between the doors:
King David (by the sculptor ) and
Moses (by the sculptor ). At the top of the portico's three walls are five bas-reliefs by
Ollivier of Marseilles, illustrating, from left to right,
Christ driving out the merchants of the Temple,
Saint John Nepomucene,
The martyrdom of Saint James,
Saint John at Patmos and
Saint Peter and Saint John healing a lame man. The three
blue stone statues of the pediment—
Saint James (in the centre) with
Saint Andrew (to his right) and
Saint John (to his left)—dating from 1861, are the work of the sculptor . They were formerly accompanied by two white stone statues of Saint
Augustine and Saint
John Nepomucene by Pierre Puyenbroeck, currently missing. The building's upper part comprises a chamfered attic with lateral slopes surmounted by a rectangular
balustrade and an octagonal wooden
bell tower. This bell tower, painted in two shades of grey and enhanced with gold in 1987, is capped by a copper
dome and a scrolled
lantern bearing the cross (1849–1851). File:Brussels - 2018-04-27 - Église Saint Jacques-sur-Coudenberg.jpg|Main façade and
portico File:Brüssel Koudenbergkirche Hauptfassade Giebelfeld 201508.jpg|
Tympanum of the
pediment File:Église Saint-Jacques-sur-Coudenberg - Clocher 1.JPG|
Bell tower Interior The interior, designed by
Louis Montoyer in
neoclassical style, is plain, sober and solemn, giving the place a very spacious and light impression. Particularly striking are the built-in Corinthian columns (1785–1787). The
altar (in Roman style), in the
choir, is made of white marble. The
tabernacle comes from the
Cistercian Cambron Abbey (Hainaut) and was placed in the church in 1789. High above the altar, in the
apse, are
bas-reliefs in
stucco or painted blue stone depicting
The Nativity,
The Last Supper and
The Entombment. To the left of the altar is a white statue representing
The Old Testament, and to the right
The New Testament. These works were all designed by the sculptor
Gilles-Lambert Godecharle. At the division between the side altar and the main altar, on the left, is another white marble statue by Adrien Joseph Anrion, representing
Saint Peter, and on the right is a statue by the same sculptor depicting
Religion. In the central
nave is a remarkable
nomenclature of the parishioners who lost their lives for the fatherland during the
First World War. Opposite is the pulpit built by Jozef Van Meeuwen (1793). Close to this masterpiece is a sculpture of
Saint Joseph and Child, sculpted in 1746 by
Laurent Delvaux. Above it hang memorial plaques of
Prince Philippe, Count of Flanders and his wife,
Princess Marie of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, the parents of the late King
Albert I. Also in the central nave is a
polychrome wooden statue by Ch. Vlaminck (1888) representing
Saint James. At both ends of the
transept are two large paintings by
Jean-François Portaels:
The Crucifixion and
The Cross, while the
relief The Stations of the Cross, hung in the side
aisles, is the work of the sculptor . The church also has a gallery
pipe organ, dating from 1844, the work of the renowned organ-builder . Some parts of the case come from an older work of art, designed by Koenraad van Eyck in the 18th century. File:Goetghebuer - 1827 - Choix des monuments - 009 Plan Eglise Saint Jacques Bruxelles.jpg|Floor plan of the church, from
Pierre-Jacques Goetghebuer's
Choix des monuments (1827) File:Sint-Jacobskerk-op-Koudenberg - Middenbeuk & Koor.JPG|Interior of the
nave and
choir File:Sint-Jacobskerk-op-Koudenberg - Middenbeuk & orgel.JPG|Built-in
Corinthian columns, nave and organ ==See also==