Close Menu
  • Home
  • Local News
  • State News
  • Crime and Safety
  • Politics
  • Community
  • About us
What's Hot

Repeat arsonist sentenced to 14 years in prison after multiple downtown Tulsa fires, including church and car incidents

October 29, 2025

Distressed 13-year-old gets help from Tulsa police

October 29, 2025

Tulsa police attend fall festival at Sequoyah Hills Baptist Church

October 29, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Repeat arsonist sentenced to 14 years in prison after multiple downtown Tulsa fires, including church and car incidents
  • Distressed 13-year-old gets help from Tulsa police
  • Tulsa police attend fall festival at Sequoyah Hills Baptist Church
  • Man arrested after assaulting hospital staff
  • Tulsa police officer recognized for off-duty bravery
  • Driver caught going 113 mph on Highway 169 faces aggravated speeding charge
  • Tulsa murder suspect extradited from Mexico, now in custody
  • 23-year-old woman arrested, charged in fatal DUI crash that killed 5-year-old in Tulsa
Saturday, November 22
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Tulsa News NowTulsa News Now
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Local News
  • State News
  • Crime and Safety
  • Politics
  • Community
  • About us
Tulsa News NowTulsa News Now
Home»Community

Fifty meters up and two apart – Belgium’s dinner-in-the-sky relaunches

By Joe MasonOctober 25, 2020 Community No Comments1 Min Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Belgians looking for a different culinary experience will once again be able to eat 50 metres (164 feet) above the ground as the dining-in-the-sky experience returns from COVID-19 lockdown with a new, socially distanced feel.

Belgium-based Dinner in the Sky, which has been set up in some 60 countries since its 2006 launch, involves diners strapped into seats at a table suspended from a crane while well-known chefs cook and serve from the centre.

Their original platform sat 22 people together along the perimeter, but in the COVID-19 era, up to 32 diners will now reserve four-person private tables spaced apart from. The chefs and servers also have a little more space to roam.

“It means all the public are sitting in sort of a bubble,” said co-CEO Stefan Kerkhof at the crane base in the centre of the Belgian capital.

Dinner in the Sky offers three sittings – for lunch and two for dinner over the coming two weeks. The price is 295 euros ($350) per head or 150 euros for weekend afternoon cocktails.

Joe Mason

Keep Reading

Tulsa police attend fall festival at Sequoyah Hills Baptist Church

Mayor Nichols issues executive order to prioritize housing in Tulsa, launching key programs to address challenges

Tulsa Fire Department welcomes new paramedics on the streets following intense training

City of Tulsa encourages safe disposal of household pollutants to protect the environment and community safety

Tulsa Fire Department partners with Our Blood Institute to provide life-saving whole blood for trauma patients

Mayor Nichols announces executive order to establish NCI Pilot Program to strengthen Tulsa’s neighborhoods

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Advertisement
Demo

Tulsa News Now is a local news journal. Tulsa, OK needed more reporting and more journalistic competition, so Joe Mason started this website back in 2014. Our mission is to connect the people in Tulsa with news, data and education that will make their everyday tasks much easier.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

  • Home
  • Local News
  • State News
  • Crime and Safety
  • Politics
  • Community
  • About us
© 2025 Tulsa News Now. Designed by TulsaNewsNow.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.