Brussels’ skyline is filling with crystalline towers and recycled‑brick lofts, yet the most disruptive feature of these new addresses is not architectural—it’s human. From luxury apartments overlooking the Senne to coworking suites near Antwerp’s harbor, property developers are baking professional concierge services into their floor plans as deliberately as elevators or Wi‑Fi. The result is a fast‑moving movement often described as concierge real estate : buildings that compete less on square metres than on the depth of personal assistance they can offer residents and tenants. At first blush, the idea sounds imported from Manhattan’s doorman culture, but Belgium lends it a distinct flavor. National labor laws prize work‑life balance and preventive health, so developers see a strategic advantage in aligning amenities with the broader agenda of bien être entreprise Belgique . An office tower in Liège, for example, might anchor its lobby with a multilingual desk that books physiot...