Listed as an 'art nouveau' wonder by turn-of-the-19th-century Belgian architect Franz Tilley, it lies just a few hundred yards away from the huge European Commission buildings.
On a list of tenants by the door is scrawled the name "Faycal Cheffou", but no one answers the bell.
Until police showed up on Thursday to search the Cheffou flat, "it's always been calm around here," says a baker whose shop is a couple of doors away.
It's all quiet otherwise "chez Cheffou" on this Easter Sunday. The neighbors are either out, on holidays or avoiding the press.
A source close to the inquiry told AFP this weekend that Faycal Cheffou was the man charged with terrorist murder Saturday but named only as Faycal C. by the federal prosecutor.
The source refused to comment however on whether he was the same man captured on video footage Tuesday in the company of the two airport suicide bombers, Ibrahim El Bakraoui and Najim Laachraoui.
So the question in everyone's mind is whether Faycal is or isn't "the man in the hat", glasses and light-colored coat seen wheeling a trolley with a large black bag like the other two, but whose device did not go off.
He is however the first and only person yet to face terrorist charges over the bloodiest attacks ever to strike the symbolic capital of Europe.
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