Tour Overview
From Art Nouveau to a New Architectural Landmark
Around 1900, Liège became one of Belgium's leading centres of Art Nouveau. Although less well known internationally than Brussels, the city developed its own distinctive interpretation of the movement through architects such as Paul Jaspar and Victor Rogister. Their elegant houses combine flowing floral ornamentation with innovative construction techniques, creating some of the finest examples of Art Nouveau in Wallonia.
A century later, Liège once again captured the world's attention with a new architectural icon. The opening of the Liège-Guillemins railway station in 2009, designed by Spanish architect and engineer Santiago Calatrava, transformed the city's image. Its spectacular structure of white steel, glass and concrete serves as the gateway to the European high-speed rail network. Rather than creating a traditional station with enclosed façades, Calatrava designed a transparent urban space where light, movement and engineering come together beneath a monumental vaulted roof stretching more than 160 metres. The station not only reconnects two parts of the city once divided by railway tracks but has also become the modern symbol of Liège itself.
The city also played an important role in the development of Belgian modernism. One of its finest ensembles is Val Benoît, the former campus of the University of Liège, built between the 1930s and the 1960s along the River Meuse. Designed by leading Belgian architects including Joseph Moutschen, Albert Puters and Albert Duesberg, the campus became a showcase of functional modernist architecture, combining engineering, education and innovative construction. After years of abandonment, the site is being carefully restored and transformed into a vibrant mixed-use district with offices, housing, cultural facilities and public spaces, preserving one of Belgium's most remarkable modernist ensembles.
This tour explores the fascinating journey from the elegant curves of Art Nouveau to the bold structural expression of twenty-first-century architecture, revealing how more than a century of architectural innovation has shaped the city of Liège.
Stops
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Stop 1: Liège-Guillemins railway station
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Stop 2: Maison Pirnay - Rue Dartois 44,
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Stop 3: Maison Bacot / Gentry - Rue Dartois 42 - architect Clément Pirnay
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Stop 4: Maison Alexis - Rue Dartois, 31
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Stop 5: Maison Piot (Maison des Francs-Maçons) - Rue de Sélys 17
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Stop 6: Maison Gédéon Michel Rue de Rotterdam 31
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Stop 7: Maison Rue de Rotterdam 11,
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Stop 8: Maison Questienne - Rue Sohet 13
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Stop 9: Design Station
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Stop 10: The Paradis Tower,
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Stop 11: Market - Rue de Fragnée 51
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Stop 12: HELMo Campus Guillemins
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Stop 13: Maison - Rue Vieux Mayeur 51
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Stop 14: Maisons Jaspar Rue Vieux Mayeur 44,
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Stop 15: Maison Van der Schrick Rue - Vieux Mayeur 38,
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Stop 16: "Modernist" entrance gate
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Stop 17: Résidence César Franck - Rue du Vieux-Mayeur 2
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Stop 18: Infrabel regional headquarters Solvay space
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Stop 19: Thermoelectric power station and thermodynamic laboratory
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Stop 20: Le Val Benoit & Mechanics Institute university building
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Stop 21: Institute of Chemistry and Metallurgy university building
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Stop 22: Institute of Civil Engineering university building