Ugliest city in the world
Charleroi in Belgium was once the heart of the country's coal industry
Charleroi was known for its industrial activities back in the days. The city was the prime source for coal mines and steel industries and when they had to shut down, the problems came with it.
By Javier Albisu Charleroi, Belgium, Aug 28 (EFE).-
From Art-nouveau-inspired narrow and elongated facades to abandoned factories and neglected neighborhoods, the Belgian old town of Charleroi is a city marked by industrial decay.. Charleroi was voted “the world’s ugliest city” by readers of the de Volkskrant Dutch newspaper in 2008. Today, the city that is located 50 kilometers south of Brussels is still included on listings of the world’s least attractive cities alongside Amman, Luanda, Los Angeles, Brazzaville and Guatemala City. “The city is not so much ugly as boring. Nothing happens there. It is not dynamic,” tour guide Nicolas Buissart tells Efe during a visit to discover the ugly sides of the city.
Charleroi, founded in 1666, saw French, Austrians and Dutch migrants settle in its once booming industrial complexes. The city flourished during the industrial revolution and continued to grow until after the Great Wars. But in the sixties, many factories shuttered and the rusty urban landscape was mired by unemployment, drugs, and crime, issues that continue to persist. “There is a mental health problem. People were used to having big companies offering all the services, even schools and swimming pools, and when they left, people became zombies,” 42-year-old Buissart says. The town with some 200,000 inhabitants was dealt a serious blow in 2016 after the closing of the Caterpillar plant, which took away 2,000 jobs with it. A few meters from the factory, three young people visiting from the northern Belgian city of Antwerp stroll around the area. “I’ve always wanted to visit Charleroi because it has a reputation for being a very ugly city and I think there is beauty in ugliness,” says visitor Matthew.“There is a mental health problem. People were used to having big companies offering all the services, even schools and swimming pools, and when they left, people became zombies,” 42-year-old Buissart says. The town with some 200,000 inhabitants was dealt a serious blow in 2016 after the closing of the Caterpillar plant, which took away 2,000 jobs with it. A few meters from the factory, three young people visiting from the northern Belgian city of Antwerp stroll around the area. “I’ve always wanted to visit Charleroi because it has a reputation for being a very ugly city and I think there is beauty in ugliness,” says visitor Matthew.