Château Miranda
History
The château was planned and designed in 1866 by the English architect Edward Milner under commission from the Liedekerke-De Beaufort family, who had left their previous home, Vêves Castle, during the French Revolution. Milner died in 1884 before the château was finished. Construction was completed in 1907 after the clock tower was erected.
Their descendants remained in occupation until World War II. A small portion of the Battle of the Bulge took place on the property, and it was during that time that the château was occupied by German forces.
In 1950, Château Miranda was renamed "Château de Noisy" when it was taken over by the National Railway Company of Belgium (NMBS/SNCB) as a holiday camp for children. It lasted as a children's camp until the late 1970s.
The château stood empty and abandoned from 1991 because the cost to maintain it was too great, and a search for investors in the property failed. Although the municipality of Celles had offered to take it over, the family refused, and the enormous building lingered in a derelict state, succumbing to decay and vandalism. Parts of the structure were heavily damaged in a fire, and many ceiling areas began collapsing. Despite this, it became a favourite venue for urban exploration.
Demolition
Demolition work began in 2016 amid concern over the structural stability of the building. The demolition took approximately a year, which began in October 2016 with the removal of the roof. By October 2017, the château had been completely demolished. The last part to be removed was the central tower.
In popular culture
The château was used as a filming location by the American television series Hannibal. The building is shown as Castle Lecter in Lithuania. The château was also used as a filming location for the Belgian movie Het huis Anubis en de wraak van Arghus (English: The house of Anubis and the revenge of Arghus)
Gallery
-
Rear of the château
-
The 56-metre (184 ft) high clock tower
-
The top (4th) floor shown almost entirely collapsed
-
The entrance gate
-
The site of the demolished castle
See also
References
- ^ Sansivero, Bryan (2 January 2015). "Belgium's Abandoned Fairytale Castle". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
- ^ "The final days of Château Miranda". Obsidian Urbex Photography.
- ^ "Hannibal (TV Series): Secondo (2015)". IMDb. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
External links
- History and photos of Noisy Miranda Castle in Dutch, English, French and German
- Opacity.us
- History and photos of Noisy Miranda Castle in English
- History and photos of Noisy Miranda Castle in English
- History and photos of Noisy Miranda Castle in French
- The History of Château de Noisy (Château Miranda) in English
- Photos of Noisy Miranda Castle from 2009
- Some history of the château and evidence of the demolition in English
- Looking back on Château Miranda - A demolished fairytale neo-Gothic castle in Belgium Photos and history, in English