
The area stretching form the botanical gardens to the Rue des Guillemins has been urbanised since the 1830’s. It became the most fashionable residential neighbourhood of the city and many impressive town houses were built in neo-classical style at this point in time. Circa 1900, wealthy homeowners undertook modernisation work on their buildings, in a quest for prestige and distinction. As a result, some façades were transformed or rebuilt in the Art Nouveau style, which was innovative in the choice of materials used (use of metal in the decorations) and the designs inspired by nature. This style is particularly present in streets opened up at the very end of the 19th century, such as the Rue de Sélys and Rue Edouard Wacken. The stature of the home owners was conveyed through a desire for opulence in the composition of the new buildings. It is therefore not by chance that the circuit will take us on a discovery of several masterpieces of Art Nouveau architecture in Liège, including five listed façades. We will also discover that the major architects in Liège’s history such as Victor Rogister, Paul Jaspar, Clément Pirnay or Arthur Snyers each developed their own specific form of architectural expression.
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