Step outside on a Saturday morning in Meerle and the first thing you notice is the silence—not the heavy, empty kind, but the alive kind. Birds in the tree line behind the garden, a light wind moving through the mature oaks, and nothing else. No traffic noise, no urban hum. Just the particular quiet that only comes when a house sits at the edge of a forest on a generous plot of land, with no immediate neighbors rushing past. This is Lage Rooy, a small residential lane in one of Belgium's most underrated rural corners, and this three-bedroom bungalow has been making that morning possible for its owners for years.
The plot alone—roughly 1,054 square metres—sets the tone for everything else. The rear garden is a proper park-like space: a stone terrace that catches afternoon sun, a wide lawn rolling toward mature trees and ornamental borders, a gazebo for evenings when the light goes golden, a pond that draws dragonflies in summer, and a wooden storage shed tucked neatly out of sight. The house wraps around this garden on two sides, so the sense of being inside a green envelope is constant. Multiple sets of doors open directly onto it from the living room, the dining room, and the master bedroom, which means the garden isn't just something you look at—it's somewhere you actually live.
Inside, the footprint is 217 square metres across two floors, organized with real intelligence around the ground-floor master suite. That bedroom, roughly 15.5 square metres, opens via French doors onto the rear garden and connects directly to a dedicated walk-in closet of about 7.5 square metres with fitted wardrobes. The en-suite bathroom—around 9 square metres—has a walk-in shower with a glass partition, a full bathtub, a vanity unit, and ... click here to read more