The new housing units and daycare center on Rue Reper-Vreven are located in the last block built before the Heysel plateau, north of Brussels. It is a particularly mixed and densely built block, leaving few interior spaces. In its immediate vicinity are remarkable buildings, such as a work by Marie Josée van Hee and the Emile Bockstael school complex, whose wings and buildings create large courtyards. The project establishes potential porosity between the different buildings and facilities. Two separate entrances are created: a patio for the nursery and a porch for a small neighborhood park, which is also the entrance to the apartments. The two entities are connected to the interior of the block between these outdoor spaces. The nursery is spread out on one level between patios and gardens, offering diagonal views and thresholds between the worlds of adults and children. The 11 housing units are all dual-aspect, east-west facing, and each has outdoor loggia spaces. On the façade, faience reinterprets the moldings of bourgeois houses, while the cornice is deliberately emphasized, offering a humble salute to the neighboring heritage.