In 1899 the Antwerp city council purchased the building for a home for the municipal archives. As it was undergoing restoration by the architect
Alexis Van Mechelen, the Provincial Commission for Monument Conservation decided to re-purpose the building as a Museum of Antiquities. (The Museum of Antiquities had been housed in the medieval castle of
Het Steen since 1864.) Renovation was completed and the Vleeshuis opened as a museum in 1913, containing some 80,000 objects. One of the oldest collections in Antwerp, the museum sought to display a broad variety of
arts works ranging from
antiquity to the present. Its collection included
metals,
ceramics,
iconography,
architecture and
musical instruments. Beginning in the 1970s, the musical instruments became a more prominent part of the Vleeshuis collection, in part due to the trend of restoring
keyboard instruments so that they would be able to be used in performance. Gradually the museum altered its permanent exhibition to focus on musical instruments. After a brief closure, in 2006 the Vleeshuis reopened as
Museum Vleeshuis | Klank van de stad (Vleeshuis | Sound of the City) (Muziekmuseum Vleeshuis/Music Museum Vleeshuis as of 2026). Currently the museum focuses on sound, music and dance in Antwerp with displays of instruments, music books, music manuscripts, paintings and models, covering the story of minstrels, bell ringers, opera singers, church and domestic music, public concerts and dance after 1800. The lower level houses a reconstruction of a
bell foundry and the Van Engelen workshop, a studio for the making of brass instruments. During the summer the Vleeshuis organizes carillon concerts in the
Cathedral of Our Lady. In September 2024 the museum closed its doors for extensive renovations to the building. The monument will be restored and all floors will be made accessible for visitors. In 2013 the
Organ collection Ghysels was allocated to Vleeshuis. The collection is being stored under climate controlled conditions in Kallo until Vleeshuis has been renovated. ==See also==