Brussels Glows in Pride: A Rainbow City of Light

Brussels is getting a Pride glow‑up this year – literally. With Brussels Rainbow City Light, the capital is turning some of its most iconic spots into a giant open‑air light installation to mark 30 years of Brussels Pride and the 2026 theme, “When Times Get Darker, We Shine Brighter.” From early May, the city centre becomes a night‑time rainbow route, inviting everyone to look up, slow down and see familiar places in a different light.

The project is part of the wider Brussels Pride 2026 programme and runs alongside Pride Week and the big march on 16 May, when more than 200,000 people are expected in town. It’s a way of stretching Pride beyond one Saturday, making the city itself carry the colours and messages of the LGBTQIA+ community days before and after the parade.

A Pride route written in light

Brussels Rainbow City Light spreads across several key locations in the city centre, turning the traditional Pride axis into a visual trail. Along the route, around 180 rainbow flags are installed from early May, creating a continuous line of colour that runs through the streets used by the Pride March.

Some buildings get a special treatment. The Bourse features dynamic illuminated displays on its six columns, transforming the former stock exchange into a glowing backdrop for the Pride crowds passing by. The La Monnaie façade hosts its own light show, adding another layer of symbolism to one of Brussels’ major cultural institutions. In Rue du Marché au Charbon – at the heart of the Rainbow Village – a canopy of rainbow‑coloured garlands hangs overhead, turning one of the city’s queerest streets into a permanent celebration.

At Mont des Arts, where the Pride Village and main stage are set up, an XXL “PRIDE 30” structure anchors the whole project, making the anniversary visible from afar. It’s both a selfie magnet and a reminder that this is not just any edition, but the result of three decades of marches, struggles and joy.

When the city itself comes out

Light is more than decoration here; it’s a statement. In a year where Brussels Pride explicitly talks about shining brighter in darker times, having public buildings and streets lit up in rainbow colours is a way for the city to “come out” alongside the community. It sends a message to residents, commuters and visitors: queer lives are part of the urban landscape, not an afterthought.

For locals, Brussels Rainbow City Light also offers a different way of experiencing Pride. You don’t have to be in the middle of the march or on the dancefloor to feel included – you can walk under the garlands of Marché au Charbon on a weeknight, pass by the Bourse after work, or cross Mont des Arts in the evening and still feel that Pride is present. It’s a quieter, but no less political, form of visibility.

A perfect backdrop for Pride stories

For ket’s readers and the wider queer community, Brussels Rainbow City Light is more than a pretty backdrop. It’s an invitation to reclaim the city at night: to take photos, tell stories, plan walks, and use these illuminated spaces as meeting points before and after Pride events. Combined with the Pride Village, the Rainbow Village programme and all the parties, talks and performances, it helps turn Brussels into a genuine Rainbow City for the whole month of May.

It also connects neatly with the idea of collective memory. Each flag, each beam of light, each rainbow garland points back to 30 years of activism, resistance and celebration in the streets of Brussels. In a global context where LGBTQIA+ rights are under pressure, seeing the capital lit up in our colours feels like both a tribute and a promise.

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