A sustainable housing training centre on the Arlon campus
ULiège and its partners FOREM and IDELUX are inaugurating a sustainable housing technology platform on the Arlon campus to meet the needs of the wood and construction sectors.
As a public university open to the world and is anchored in the scientific, cultural and economic development of its region, the University of Liège relies on its three pillars: teaching, research and civic engagement.
ULiège trains responsible citizens who are provided with cutting-edge knowledge and critical thinking, are able to share knowledge and can push forward an increasingly complex world.
ULiège develops and promotes excellence in research, multidisciplinary and direct engagement with its instruction.
Global exposure is a top priority at the University of Liège. The institution offers a wide range of international mobility opportunities to students, researchers and staff, enabling them to enhance their cross-disciplinary skills and language knowledge.
ULiège: an experience of daily living. Located in 3 cities and 4 campuses, the university is a key player in terms of the environment and mobility.
As a sign of its commitment to Sustainable Development, the University of Liège has just offered each new student enrolled in BAC1 a tree which will be planted in the coming weeks in the Luki nature reserve in the Democratic Republic of Congo. A project carried out by the ULiège Green Office and scientists from the research group Forest is Life (TERRA/Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech).
T
his is a very special gift for the new students who are enrolled in their first BAC this year. A welcome gift, which the University of Liège wished to offer to its students as a symbolic mark of its commitment to sustainable development. This gift is ... a tree. Why a tree? Because it represents a strong symbol, trees being essential to life. But also because forests are home to 80% of biodiversity and participate in numerous environmental mechanisms such as climate regulation, a subject of great concern to young people. It is well known that many forests are in danger today, precisely because of human activity. This is why the ULiège, through its Green Office, wanted to propose a promising project that would make sense to its student community.
If we count the number of the new students enrolled at ULiège this year, this represents a little more than 4000 trees that will be planted. A forest that will not take up residence in Sart Tilman - whose site is already sufficiently dense and preserved - but in the Luki nature reserve in the Democratic Republic of Congo. This reserve was not chosen at random, it was the students of the Green Office, in collaboration with experts from the Forest is Life research centre of the Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech faculty (Jean-Louis Doucet, Baudouin Michel and Cédric Vermeulen), who selected this UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, admirable for its rich biodiversity. And to implement this project, the students of ULiège wished to twin up with the student community of ERAIFT (Regional Post-Graduate School of Integrated Planning and Management of Forests and Tropical Territories), a school with which ULiège has been collaborating for many years.
In practice, it is the students from Kinshasa who will take charge of the plantation in the Luki reserve. Several local species have already been chosen to restore a four-hectare area of degraded land. As a symbolic mirror effect, at the ULiège, a plantation of about forty fruit trees will be organised by the Green Office on the Sart Tilman Campus in order to regenerate its old orchards. The beginning of the operations will take place at the end of November, beginning of December, the most favourable period in the DRC for planting.
Other projects such as the creation of a sustainable development training course for these same new BAC1 students, the Green Office's student projects or the launch of a challenge programme to reduce its environmental footprint are among the contributions of ULiège's university community to sustainable development.
Created in January 2020, the Green Office is ULiège's sustainable development office. Carrying out projects designed by students, for students, the Green Office is a platform that informs, connects and supports students in the development of projects to make the university's activities more sustainable. Five "Sustainable Campus" projects are currently being developed by a motivated team of working and volunteer students (called the Greeners). The Green Officie will also offer the ULiège student community challenges to reduce its environmental footprint.
ULiège and its partners FOREM and IDELUX are inaugurating a sustainable housing technology platform on the Arlon campus to meet the needs of the wood and construction sectors.
Des représentant·es politiques sont venus ce 19 avril à la rencontre de la communauté ULiège pour débattre de thèmes liés à la vie universitaire, en vue des élections.
Communiqué du Conseil des rectrices et recteurs du 18 avril 2024 à propos du décret « Paysage » amendé