UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles | |
Other name | UCLouvain Saint-Louis Brussels |
---|---|
Former names | Université Saint-Louis - Bruxelles (2013-2018) Facultés universitaires Saint-Louis (1929–2012) Faculté universitaire Saint-Louis |
Motto | Sedes Sapientiae(Latin) |
Motto in English | Seat of Wisdom, Seat of Knowledge |
Type | Free university (state funded) |
Established | 1857 |
Parent institution | UCLouvain |
Religious affiliation | Roman Catholicism |
Academic affiliations | Académie Louvain IFCU EUA AUF |
Budget | €39,785,004 (2018) [1] |
Rector | Pierre Jadoul |
Academic staff | 403 |
Administrative staff | 104 |
Students | 4,482 [2] (2021) |
64 | |
Location | , 1000 , 50°51′11.21″N4°21′40.59″E / 50.8531139°N 4.3612750°E |
Campus | Saint-Louis (urban); Marie Haps (urban) |
Colours | Saint-Louis Red & Louvain Blue |
Website | www.usaintlouis.be |
UCLouvain Saint-Louis Brussels [3] is an autonomous university campus specialized in social and human sciences part of UCLouvain and based in Brussels, Belgium.
Established in 1857, Saint-Louis University, Brussels (officially, in French Université Saint-Louis – Bruxelles) used to be a public university belonging to the French Community of Belgium before a merger with the University of Louvain decided in 2017. Both universities have been using the new designation 'UCLouvain' since 2018 and legally merged in 2023.
When the Catholic University of Belgium moved from Mechelen to Leuven in 1835, the unused buildings were used to host the newly founded École de Commerce et d'Industrie (School of Trade and Industry), which was inaugurated in 1838. [4]
The school moved to Brussels in 1858 and became the Institut Saint-Louis (a diocesan secondary school), where the Philosophy Department was founded, which eventually grew to become a university. This was the result of the Catholic clergy's and Pope Pius IX's wish to have a Catholic institution in Brussels teaching philosophy. The department prepared candidates for the higher liberal arts certification that would qualify them to enroll for a university law degree. [5]
In 1891, with the recognition of non-state universities, the institution became recognized as an autonomous ('free') university, a status which was confirmed in 1929.
Over time, Faculties developed and expanded, and a Faculty of Law was added to the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters.
In 1925, the university founded HEC Saint-Louis (Hautes études commerciales), Belgium's first independent business school, together with its Dutch-speaking counterpart, EHSAL (St. Aloysius College of Economics). Also, the university established the world-renowned School of Philosophical and Religious Sciences, founded by Cardinal Mercier.
In 1948, the Philosophy and Arts section separated from the Institut Saint-Louis, and continued independently as a non-profit university under the name "Faculté universitaire Saint-Louis". It was not until 1960 that the administrative split was fully effective and the buildings separated. [6]
In 1965, the Faculty of Economic, Social and Political Sciences (ESPO) was established and the university's name was later changed to the plural Facultés universitaires Saint-Louis.
In 1969, Saint-Louis starts giving lectures to Dutch-speaking students, in addition to lessons at EHSAL/HEC, but the Dutch-speaking department would leave the Facultés universitaires Saint-Louis in 1973, to create the independent Universitaire Faculteiten Sint-Aloysius (UFSAL). This later became the Catholic University of Brussels (K.U.Brussel). Both UFSAL and EHSAL merged to create the Hogeschool-Universiteit Brussel (HUB), together with other Flemish institutions like Vlekho, which originated from the Saint-Louis-linked Institut libre Marie Haps . In 2013, HUB was reorganized and today comprises the KU Leuven campus Brussel, and the vocational college Odisee. Both are still located in the same street as Saint-Louis University, the rue du Marais or Broekstraat.
French-speaking HEC Saint-Louis, which was renamed to ISC Saint-Louis (Institut supérieur de Commerce), co-founded the "ICHEC - ISC Saint-Louis - ISFSC" Consortium of Schools in 1995, and de facto integrated the Institut catholique des Hautes Études commerciales (ICHEC) in 2004. Saint-Louis University, Brussels still organises degrees in economics, management and business engineering, on the same site as the ISC Saint-Louis, within its Faculty of Economics, Politics, Social and Communication Sciences (ESPO).
Between 2004 and 2013, Saint-Louis University and the three other Belgian French-speaking Catholic universities; namely the University of Namur, the Université catholique de Louvain and the Facultés universitaires catholiques de Mons (now a part of UCLouvain) made up the Académie universitaire Louvain network. [7] This notably meant the integration of Saint-Louis' economics and management programmes into the Louvain School of Management. After the reform of Belgian French-speaking universities in 2013, Saint-Louis became a founding member of the Pôle académique de Bruxelles, along with the Université libre de Bruxelles and, by decree, was renamed from Facultés universitaires Saint-Louis to Université Saint-Louis - Bruxelles.
In May 2017, Saint-Louis University, Brussels and the University of Louvain (primarily based in Louvain-la-Neuve and which has 2 campuses in Brussels: Woluwe and Saint-Gilles) officially announced that the two universities were merging in a single institution named UCLouvain, with Saint-Louis becoming 'UCLouvain Saint-Louis - Bruxelles'. [8] Both institutions have started using the name UCLouvain in September 2018.
Saint-Louis' main campus is located on the northern edge of the historic inner city, opposite the Botanical Garden of Brussels across the small ring road. In 2015, the department and programmes of translation and interpreting of the Institut libre Marie Haps were transferred to the newly established Marie Haps Faculty of Translation and Interpreting at Saint-Louis University, Brussels. [9] This fifth Faculty is located in buildings along the rue d'Arlon, near the European Parliament.
In 2004, a fire destroyed offices and a large part of the historic library building was flooded following the intervention of the fire brigade. A new library was built and inaugurated in 2005, while some elements of the old library remain (including part of the imposing wooden staircase). The university's main library moved to the third and fourth floors of the new Ommegang building in 2018.
In 2015, the university indeed acquired an office building belonging to Belfius bank, the Ommegang, next to the University's building located at 109 rue du Marais, in order to relieve the institution's infrastructure, whose number of students tripled in fifteen years. [14] New lecture theatres were built, including the institution's largest auditorium, a new library, a new multi-purpose room for 1300 people, and a residence with about 100 student apartments. The new facilities are accessible since the 2017 academic year, increasing the surface area of the main Saint-Louis campus from 25,000 m² to 47,000 m². [15]
Saint-Louis University is located on two campuses in Brussels and Ixelles. The main campus, Saint-Louis, with 48 km² of university space, is located in the city centre, between the rue de l'Ommegang and du Marais, as well as the boulevards du Jardin botanique and Pachéco. [15] This tight urban campus is split in two by the Institut secondaire Saint-Louis, forming to the north the "Botanique" and "Préfecture" buildings housing the Institute of European Studies (Marais 119), the university press (Botanique 42), the university's official main building (Botanique 43) and the historical building with the rectorate (Botanique 38) and the former library; and to the south the more recent Marais 109 and Ommegang buildings, where the faculty and student administrations are located, and several large auditoriums. [16]
The courses of the Marie Haps Faculty Translation & Interpreting are given on the Marie-Haps campus, shared with the Haute École Vinci , in Ixelles, in the European quarter, more precisely in front of the European Parliament. The buildings of the Marie-Haps campus are located on either side of rue d'Arlon and historically in the Hôtel Beernaert. [16] The language courses (extra-curricular) are given in an office building further north, between rue d'Arlon and rue de Trèves, where Marie-Haps' Dutch-speaking departments (which have integrated the Erasmushogeschool Brussel and Vlekho) used to be located.
The Marie-Haps Faculty is also located on the Tilleuls site, former Œuvre du Calvaire hospital, which integrated the Saint-Luc University Hospital in UCLouvain Brussels Woluwe in 2003. The Tilleuls site includes a large country house, a caretaker's house, a chapel and the former hospital transformed into classrooms, located on the Chaussée de Wavre.
Students enrolled at Saint-Louis University, Brussels on 1 December (excluding doctoral students). [17] The university took the name Université Saint-Louis - Bruxelles instead of FUSL during the 2013–2014 academic year.
Saint-Louis University, Brussels is specialized in undergraduate programmes, for which it has developed unique degrees. For example, it is the only Belgian university organising bilingual or trilingual bachelor's (with its sister university, KU Leuven campus Brussels); Erasmus programmes in social and human sciences; evening schedules; and the possibility of completing double bachelor's degrees in the majority of majors. It is also the only university of the Wallonia-Brussels Federation offering a fully English bachelor's degree; in business engineering. [18]
In total, the university organises 25 Bachelor programmes, two Master's degrees, an Executive master's degree, seven Masters of specialization (postgraduate master's degrees) and more than 20 university certificates of continuing education. Most Master's diplomas and university certificates are double degrees with one or more Belgian or foreign universities.
Since its foundation, Saint-Louis has distinguished itself by its university character, which is to produce knowledge in addition to offering it. The first research centres were set up at the end of the 19th century. In 1995, the decree organizing higher education granted the University the right to organize doctoral theses, further contributing to the expansion of research.
The university organises research through three research institutes:
and various research centers:
Saint-Louis University, Brussels has also founded the Brussels Studies Institute together with the two other Brussels universities: Université libre de Bruxelles and Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
The School of Philosophical and Religious Sciences, founded in 1925 by cardinal Mercier, is not a research center nor a faculty, but continues to teach and study philosophy, theology and social and human sciences, to which it has been a major contributor. Chairs of the School of Philosophical and Religious Sciences are always public and have included Paul Ricœur, Michel Serres, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, Cornelius Castoriadis, Jean-Luc Nancy, Jacques Lacan, Tzvetan Todorov, Alain Touraine or Pierre Bourdieu.
UCLouvain is Belgium's largest French-speaking university. It is located in Louvain-la-Neuve, which was expressly built to house the university, and Brussels, Charleroi, Mons, Tournai and Namur. Since September 2018, the university uses the branding UCLouvain, replacing the acronym UCL, following a merger with Saint-Louis University, Brussels.
The Louvain School of Management is the international business school of the University of Louvain (UCLouvain), Belgium, founded in 1897. The faculty offers courses on the campuses of Louvain-la-Neuve, UCLouvain FUCaM Mons and UCLouvain Charleroi.
The Belgian American Educational Foundation (BAEF) is an educational charity. It supports the exchange of university students, scientists and scholars between the United States and Belgium. The foundation fosters the higher education of deserving Belgians and Americans through its exchange-fellowship program. Since 1977, Dr. Emile Boulpaep is the president of the BAEF.
The University of Namur or Université de Namur (UNamur) is a Jesuit university in Namur, in the French Community of Belgium. Both teaching and research in the university are carried out by six faculties.
The Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc is a non-profit academic hospital of the University of Louvain (UCLouvain), located on the university campus of UCLouvain Bruxelles Woluwe in Woluwe-Saint-Lambert, Brussels, Belgium. The hospital opened on 23 August 1976, moving from Leuven to Brussels.
Science and technology in Brussels, the central region of Belgium (Europe), is well developed with the presence of several universities and research institutes.
Jacques Leclercq was a Belgian Roman Catholic theologian and priest.
Académie Louvain was a network of French-speaking catholic universities in Belgium active between 2004 and 2015. It was formed following the Bologna process to reform higher-level education, creating a larger university structure.
Woluwe-Saint-Lambert or Sint-Lambrechts-Woluwe is one of the 19 municipalities of the Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium. In common with all of Brussels' municipalities, it is legally bilingual (French–Dutch). In French, it is often spelt Woluwé-Saint-Lambert to reflect the Frenchified pronunciation of what was originally a Dutch place name, but the official spelling is without an accent. The Woluwe stream, from which it takes its name, flows through the municipality.
Erasmus Hospital is a teaching hospital in the municipality of Anderlecht, Brussels, Belgium. It is a research hospital associated with the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), and was opened in 1977. It has 1,048 beds and 4,000 employees, treating between 25,000 and 30,000 inpatients and between 350,000 and 400,000 outpatients each year.
The Institut libre Marie Haps (ILMH) was a former French-speaking institution of higher education in Brussels, Belgium, founded by Marie Haps in 1919. Since 1995 it has become a constituent part of Haute École Léonard de Vinci except for its translation and interpreting department which, still on campus, is a faculty of Saint-Louis University, Brussels (UCLouvain) since 2015. Since 2019, the Haute École Léonard de Vinci is no longer divided in institutions but in sectors. The name Institut libre Marie Haps still remains as a quality label for some of the trainings given in the Haute École Léonard de Vinci.
UCLouvain Bruxelles Woluwe, also known as Louvain-en-Woluwe or Alma, is a campus of the University of Louvain in Brussels, Belgium. The campus, built in the 1970s following the Leuven crisis, houses the Faculties of Medicine and Dentistry, Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences and of Public Health, the Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc, the university's main academic hospital, as well as many other institutions of higher education and a vast sports complex.
The Marie Haps Faculty of Translation and Interpreting is a faculty of Saint-Louis University, Brussels (UCLouvain) located on its own campus in Brussels' European Quarter, in the municipalities of Ixelles and the City of Brussels. It is Belgium's oldest translation school, founded in 1955, and the fifth faculty of Saint-Louis University, Brussels, which it fully merged with in 2015.
The CHU UCLouvain Namur or CHU UCL Namur is a general hospital with academic beds located in the cities of Namur, Dinant, Yvoir and Ciney, in the Belgian province of Namur. Established in 2015, it is UCLouvain's second hospital.
UCLouvain Charleroi is a campus of the University of Louvain in Charleroi, Belgium. Consisting of 3 faculties and a series of research centers and institutes, UCLouvain Charleroi consists of the Maison Georges Lemaître, in the center of the city, and a branch in Montignies-sur-Sambre.
The Faculty of Economic, Social and Political Sciences and Communication (ESPO) is a faculty of the University of Louvain, located on the campuses of Louvain-la-Neuve, FUCaM Mons and UCLouvain Charleroi. It originates in the School of Political and Social Sciences founded by Jules Van den Heuvel in Louvain in 1892. With over 6000 students, it is UCLouvain's largest faculty.
The Louvain School of Engineering or École polytechnique de Louvain (EPL) is a faculty of the University of Louvain, Belgium, founded in 1864. Known as the Faculty of Applied Sciences prior to 2008, it currently operates on the campuses of Louvain-la-Neuve and UCLouvain Charleroi.
The Faculty of Architecture, Architectural Engineering and Urban Planning, often called LOCI, is the 14th faculty of the University of Louvain, Belgium. It became an independent faculty in 2009, with the merger of three institutes founded between 1867 and 1882, and is active in Brussels (Saint-Gilles), Tournai and Louvain-la-Neuve.