

From castles to circuits
Belgium may be a small and modest country, but it has always been a nation of designers.
In fact, Belgium has one of the highest numbers of castles per square kilometer in the world, a quiet reminder that designing, building, and thinking structurally has been part of our DNA for centuries.
That spirit never disappeared.
It evolved.
Today, Belgians should not be underestimated in the space industry. Our country plays an active and meaningful role in space research, space engineering, and space technology. Belgian companies contribute to missions that orbit far above our heads, not by being the loudest, but by being precise, reliable, and smart in design.
In Europe, space investment is often distributed across multiple countries. That is why some Belgian space companies consciously open additional locations in other European countries, not to leave Belgium behind, but to remain part of a shared European space ecosystem. It is a practical way to stay connected to funding, collaboration, and long-term research while continuing to build expertise at home.
What defines Belgian engineering is not scale,
it is quality, efficiency, and thoughtful design.
At Atspace, we proudly stand in that tradition. We contribute to space electronics, PCB design, electronics architecture, and test solutions that support complex space systems. Quietly. Carefully. Reliably. Our work may be small in size, but it is designed to function flawlessly in environments where failure is not an option.
And beyond technology, there is something even more important.
Humanity must keep exploring.
Keep researching how things work.
Keep understanding how systems came into existence, and how they can evolve.
Space research is not about prestige.
It is about curiosity, responsibility, and progress.
From castles to circuits, from stone to silicon, from Earth to orbit.
Belgium continues to design the future.
From Space to Earth, this is our message:
Small countries can have a big impact when they design with care.
Atspace, Inspired to Go Beyond.
Belgian engineering, quietly supporting space.
