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Brasserie Van Haelen-Coche

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'''From Bier et Brouwerijen te Brussel:
'''
Located at chaussée Chaussée d'Alsemberg 991-993 
In the Uccle town archives, there is a building permit (AP 2460) of a certain Van Haelen who wished to build a brewery along the route Brussels-Lille. These two documents make us suspect that Van Haelen, a pub owner and innkeeper (at the future site of the brewery Merlo Merlink), between 1866-1898 moved from the Stallestraat to the Alsembergsesteenweg into their own new private brewery. The specialty of this brewery was Gueuze and Kriekenlambic in bottles. Around the turn of the century they also brewed Lambic, Faro, Bruin Tafelbier, and Mars.
In early 1902, Emile Van Haelen-Coche had permission to construct a beer depot in the back garden of his brewery located on the Alsembergsesteenweg 615 (later 991). The brewery was then called "Brasserie del'Ange". Van Haelen-Coche Brewery disappeared between 1963 and 1970 (1968, ed.). By 1970, the brewery buildings were sold to an industrial bakery. <ref name=Quintens> Quintens, Patricia, Bier et Brouwerijen te Brussel, AVMB, 1996, pp. 220. </ref>
 
'''From the State Archives of Belgium:
'''
 
Brasserie-Malterie de la Fontaine was founded in 1751. Bought in the first half of the nineteenth century by Lambert Van Haelen (b. 1808), it remained in the hands of the family for several generations. In 1898, Emile Van Haelen and his wife Henriette Coche, both brewers, had built a brewery and a mansion on the lot they had acquired on chaussée d'Alsemberg.
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