Plan your trip

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→ Join the Horst peloton ←

Horst Peloton is back for another ride. Cycle with us to this year’s Festival and take a trip to Asiat Park - both on wheels and in sound. Find the departure timings below:

Thursday May 1 at 14h00

Friday May 2 at 16h00

Saturday May 3 at 16h00, with an exclusive return ride at 02h15

Guided by the Veloblasters - soundsystems on wheels - the Horst Peloton sets off daily underneath the Suzan Daniel bridge at Quai des Matériaux in Brussels. Each ride features some of our favourite selectors, making sure we arrive in the best possible mood at Asiat Park.

→ Book a city shuttle ←

We offer Brussels shuttles from two locations within the city. These tickets are single transfers, allowing you to purchase separate inbound and outbound tickets. Shuttles from Antwerp, Ghent, and Leuven include round trips—both to and from the festival.

Please note, access to the shuttle service requires a valid ticket confirmation for the designated time and stop. Boarding at a different time or stop is not possible. More info on timings and departure locations can be found on the event-shuttle website.

→ Book a FestiTent ←

We’re excited to welcome you soon to the Horst campsite for three unforgettable days and nights, featuring our signature royal brunch and vibrant camping atmosphere. If the idea of bringing and pitching your own camping gear feels daunting, we’ve got great news! FestiTent offers a hassle-free, sustainable alternative—your pre-pitched tent will be ready when you arrive. FestiTent has convenient packages for groups of 1 to 4 campers, available in three comfort levels. Choose the option that suits you best and secure your spot.

→ Pre top-up ←

When you arrive at Horst, you will receive a Payconiq by Bancontact bracelet, which you can use to buy food and drinks.

Easy top-up: Scan the QR code with the Payconiq by Bancontact app to add funds to your bracelet. Or, use your debit/credit card to buy tokens on-site. Need help? Visit the helpdesk. Top-up beforehand until April 30 at 18h00, and enjoy a little extra!

→ Reserve a locker ←

Grab a festival or campsite locker—multiple sizes, easy access. Check the options, prices, and pre-registe Festival lockers close 30 mins after the last set; camping lockers on May 4 at 14h00.

No Drugs

All illegal substances are prohibited. You can deposit any illegal substances in the mercy bin before entering the festival grounds. Possession or use on-site may result in removal from the festival.

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MORE NEWS

Horst Arts & Music is headed for new territories in 2025. Our festival grounds are expanding across the Zenne, for which a new pedestrian bridge will be built.

Leading architect Sumayya Vally, Principal of the Johannesburg/London-based studio Counterspace, has won the competition to design this new bridge in Vilvoorde, Belgium. The Asiat-Darse bridge is a project initiated by the city of Vilvoorde and Horst Arts and Music. It is financed by Kunst in Opdracht at the Flemish Ministry for Culture, and ANB, the Flemish Agency for Nature and Forest who partnered with DVW, the Agency for Flemish Waterways. Curator Heidi Ballet is artistic advisor for the project.

Counterspace’s response to the brief uncovered the story and legacy of Paul Panda Farnana, one of the most important, yet least acknowledged figures of the city, who epitomises the region’s complex relationships with past and future generations of migrant bodies and communities.

Sumayya Vally said: “Vilvoorde is a city celebrated for its diversity. It comprises multiple cultures, identities, and narratives. I was deeply moved to uncover the story of Paul Panda Farnana through our research, which then drove our response to the city’s brief for a pedestrian bridge. Trained as a horticulturist at the Vilvoorde Horticultural School not far from the site, this project will revive Farnana’s legacy by foregrounding the concept of the species explored in his research, alongside water architectures from the Congo.”

Vally took inspiration from water architecture of the Congo as one of the starting points to honour this history. Along the Congo River, fleets of dugout canoes are frequently seen docked alongside one another. As a collective, they form a communal platform, from which trading and gathering can take place. These images form the basis for the proposed Asiat-Darse bridge, itself a place of gathering of travellers, whether commuters or visitors. The bridge is constructed of a series of boats tied together to cross the canal.

“Trained as a horticulturist at the Vilvoorde Horticultural School not far from the Asiat site, this project will revive Farnana’s legacy by foregrounding the concept of the species explored in his research, alongside water architecture from the Congo.”

— Sumayya Vally

Vally looked at plants and species to honour Farnana’s horticultural work. Each ‘boat’ form serves as an isolated seed bed, in which specific plants can be cultivated in order for their seeds to be spread on the wind, and carried on the bodies of people travelling across the bridge. As a result, the bridge pays homage to Farnana’s horticultural work, serving as a nursery, or seeding bed from which plants may distribute themselves, migrating across the site.

In addition to the main structure, several smaller boat structures are proposed, which embed themselves along the river bank. Each of them will be named after the labourers whose names were included on the register from the Congo, which the studio discovered in their research. Every boat will act as a pollinator - pollinating an industrial zone and acting as a little garden for reflection for passers-by to rest in.

“A bridge is a connector - in our project, it is a connector to past and future narratives of migration too. It is my hope that this project helps to embody and raise awareness on the story of Farnana, and that it reminds us as architects that we have to listen deeply to the grounds of the contexts we work in. There is always architecture waiting to happen in places that are overlooked.”

— Sumayya Vally

ABOUT SUMAYYA VALLY

Sumayya Vally is Principal of Counterspace—an award-winning design, research and pedagogical practice searching for expression for hybrid identities and territory, particularly for African and Islamic conditions—both rooted and diasporic. Her design process is often forensic, and draws on the aural, performance and the overlooked as generative places of history and work.

In 2022, Vally was selected by the World Economic Forum to be one of its Young Global Leaders, a community of the world’s most promising artists, researchers, entrepreneurs, activists, and political leaders, and, as a TIME100 Next list honoree, has been identified as someone who will shape the future of architectural practice and canon. She has joined the World Monuments Fund Board of Directors, and serves on several boards through her interest in dynamic forms of archive, embodied heritage, and supporting new networks of knowledge in the arts. The Royal Architectural Institute of Canada inducted Sumayya into its 2023 Honorary Fellowship, which recognises individuals that exemplify the tremendous impact that architects have—not only on the built environment, but also on public life and the world around them.

In 2019, Counterspace was invited to design the 20th Serpentine Pavilion in London, making Vally the youngest architect ever to win this internationally renowned commission. Vally is also the Artistic Director of the inaugural Islamic Arts Biennale in Jeddah.

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