Pierre Laconte

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Pierre Laconte (born 17 May 1934), is a Belgian academic, born in Brussels, Belgium. He specialises in urban transport and architectural planning and environmental issues.

He has a Doctorate in Laws and a Doctorate in Economics from the Catholic University of Louvain and Dr honoris causa, Napier University, Edinburgh, Laconte one of the three planners in charge of the Groupe Urbanisme Architecture. This Group was responsible for the master plan and the architectural co-ordination of Louvain-la-Neuve, a pedestrian new university town developed from 1968 by the University on agricultural land, around a new railway station, 25 km South of Brussels. Louvain-la-Neuve presently has a day/night population of ca 40.000. It won the UIA Abercrombie Award.

He received the UN Habitat Scroll of Honour Award in 1999 and was the Belgian Government Representative at UN Habitat I in 1976, at Habitat II in 1996, and at the UN Kyoto Conference of Parties on Climate (1997).

Laconte is also the president of the International Society of City and Regional Planners[1] and the Foundation for the Urban Environment.[2]

[edit] International Activities

[edit] Selected Publications

  • Mutations urbaines et Marchés immobiliers, Brussels: Oyez 1978 - won the Credit Communal/Gemeentekrediet Award 1974-1978 for Law and Economics (is presently being updated)
  • Human and Energy Factors in Planning: A Systems Approach, The Hague; Martinus Nijhoff, 1982.
  • Water Resources and Land-Use Planning: A Systems Approach, The Hague, Martinus Nijhoff, 1982.
  • La gare et la ville (Train, Station and City), Liège: Editions du Perron, 2003[2]
  • L’aéroport le train et la ville (Airport, Train and City), in French & Dutch, Liège: Ed. du Perron, 2005[2]
  • Brussels; Perspectives for a European Capital, Brussels: Editions Aliter, 2007[2]
  • L’Europe, la Belgique et Bruxelles : Un urbanisme cosmopolite, Lyon, Editions du Certu (Ministère de l’Equipement), 2007[2]

[edit] References