Sunday Coffee in the Marolles @Bar Mazette
Details
This Weekend Morning Coffee Meeting - Sunday Edition - will take place at Bar Mazette, in the heart of the Marolles, and will be hosted by Emilia and Adriano. Newbies welcome!
🗓 Sunday, 8 February
⏰ from 10:30
👥 limited to 12 people only
Address:
Bar Mazette
Place du Jeu de Balle 4
1000 Brussels
This is one of our Sunday editions, which are usually meant to test new places outside our usual coffee locations. These editions are smaller and more experimental, and focus as much on the place and the neighbourhood as on the group itself.
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### ⏰ Timing
The core time of the event is 10:30 – 12:00.
That’s when everyone should be there.
Because this is a very small group (12 people maximum), registration is obligatory.
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### ⚠️ IMPORTANT — please read carefully
Places are usually very limited on Sundays.
Please do not register if you are unsure you can come.
If you register and later realise you can’t make it, cancel as soon as possible, latest on Saturday afternoon.
There is often a waiting list, and it’s only fair to give people on it a real chance to join. Registering and not showing up means someone else stayed home for nothing.
Thank you for being fair and respectful.
If you’re on the waiting list, please check your status on Saturday evening at the latest.
See you on Sunday ☕
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### 📍 The place & the area
Mazette is located right next to Place du Jeu de Balle, where Brussels’ best-known flea market takes place every Sunday morning.
The area is busy, sometimes messy, full of objects with past lives and people just passing through. It’s a very typical Marolles atmosphere.
Mazette opened in 2022 as a cooperative project. It was created by people who wanted a place that belongs to the neighbourhood and works with it. It’s not only a bar, and not only about beer.
Part of the beer is brewed on site, with the tanks located below the bar. The food follows the same logic: bread baked in-house, a short menu, seasonal ingredients, and dishes that are simple and meant to be shared. Nothing complicated, nothing rushed.
The place also works as a neighbourhood meeting point. Locals come in after the flea market, others stay for events or just to sit for a while. Conversations overlap, people stay longer than planned, and the space naturally shifts between café, bar and meeting place.
For a small Sunday morning coffee meeting, it’s a very fitting setting: informal, local, and closely connected to the Marolles around it
