The initial building, which was then called the Palace of the Council of Brabant (French: Palais du Conseil du Brabant),[4] was built between 1778 and 1783, during the time of the Austrian Netherlands, to the plans of the French architect Gilles-Barnabé Guimard.[1]
The central body of the building was transformed in 1816–1818 by the architect Charles Vander Straeten [fr] to house the States General established by King William I of the Netherlands.[1] The hemicycle built for this occasion at the rear burned down in 1820 and was rebuilt in 1821–22 by Vander Straeten.[2]
In 1831, after Belgian independence, the building, merged with the palaces of the Chancellery and the Chamber of Accounts, took the name of Palace of the Nation (French: Palais de la Nation, Dutch: Paleis der Natie, German: Palast der Nation).[5] The semicircular hall built by Vander Straeten has since housed the Chamber of Representatives.[1]
In 1883, the Chamber was ravaged by a second fire and it took the architect Henri Beyaert three years, until 1886, to rebuild it.[6]
Adriaens-Pannier, Anne; Bekkers, Ludo; Braet, Jan (2006). Kunst in de wandelgangen : het onbekende patrimonium van de senaat (in Dutch). Tielt: Lannoo. ISBN978-90-209-6879-8.