Broken lift in Antwerp’s Luchtbal leaves residents struggling for nearly eight weeks
Updated 29 June 2026, Antwerp-Luchtbal: Residents of an apartment block in Antwerp’s Luchtbal district have been living with a broken lift for almost eight weeks, Het Nieuwsblad reported. The paper said firefighters had to help evacuate a 95-year-old woman from the eighth floor, making the outage a daily mobility and safety problem rather than a routine repair delay.
Trust & Evidence📚 4 sources· ✓ Editor reviewed· 🧠 AI-checked· Trust status: not yet independently verifiedView evidence & verification Hide
Verification record
- 📚 4 verified sources — Het Nieuwsblad · Vlaanderen.be · City of Antwerp · FPS Economy Belgium
- 🧠 High confidence — AI-checked, editor-approved
- 🇧🇪 Belgian impact: High
- 📜 Provenance recorded & timestamped
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About this story
The story centres on a kapotte lift Luchtbal case in Antwerp’s Luchtbal neighbourhood, where residents told Het Nieuwsblad that the lift outage has effectively limited access for older people and people with reduced mobility. The key reported incident is that the brandweer heeft 95-jarige vrouw moeten evacueren from the 8th floor after the lift remained unusable.
How to read this story
The history
Luchtbal is a northern Antwerp neighbourhood with high-rise housing, public transport links and a mixed residential profile. Flemish housing policy sets minimum standards for safety and quality, while federal rules cover lift safety and inspection obligations.
Regional impact
The impact is local to Antwerp’s Luchtbal district, but it fits a wider Flemish housing concern: ageing apartment infrastructure, repair delays and the vulnerability of older residents in multi-storey buildings.
Local impact
For the affected block, the practical impact is immediate: residents face stairs, cancelled outings, dependence on help and extra pressure during medical or emergency situations.
What this means for you
Residents should document missed access, medical impacts and repair communications, and contact the building manager, landlord or relevant housing service for a written repair timeline.
Opposing perspectives
- Residents and relatives
Residents affected by the lift outage see the failure as a loss of basic access. For older people, parents with prams and anyone with reduced mobility, eight weeks without a lift changes ordinary tasks such as shopping, appointments and visits into logistical problems.
- Building managers and lift-maintenance operators
Building managers and certified lift firms normally have to balance urgent access needs with technical diagnosis, safety certification and availability of parts. That perspective does not remove the hardship for residents, but it shapes how quickly a legal repair can be completed.
Related to this story
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This briefing was prepared with AI assistance and reviewed by a Belgium Impulse editor before publication. methodology.



