The restoration was halted. The fort was sealed again. And the "Shutter Island" nickname, which had been whispered by local teens, entered the common lexicon.
Welcome to —or as urban explorers have rebaptized it: the concrete asylum of the North Sea. The Fortress of Solitude Located just a kilometer off the coast of Ostend, accessible only by a narrow, crumbling causeway at low tide, the structure squats on a salt marsh like a sleeping beast. Built by the French in 1811 under Napoleon Bonaparte, its purpose was purely military: to defend the strategic port of Ostend from a British naval invasion that never came. shutter island belgie
But the military history is only the prologue. The real story—the one that earned the "Shutter Island" moniker—began in the 1950s. After World War II, the Belgian military had a problem: what to do with an obsolete, water-logged fort in the middle of nowhere? The answer, as it was for many remote European structures, was to turn it into a storage facility. But not for ammunition or grain. The restoration was halted