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On the National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence against Women, we observe a moment of silence to honour the 14 female students and staff who lost their lives 28 years ago at École Polytechnique in Montreal, simply because they were women. We stand resolute and united in our commitment to take action to end all forms of violence against women.
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2017PREM0131-002021
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Studying slope wind turbulence on a steep alpine slope in Val Ferret in July 2013 during a research project at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (ENAC / EFLUM) Photo: Andreas Christen, UBC.
Part of album Katabatibc flow on a steep slope
Jean-Paul Soucy (McGill University), Daniel Scheel (Concordia University), Nathalie Moon (University of Waterloo), Léo Belzile (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne), Kuan Liu (University of Toronto), ??.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Sarah Kenderdine, Director, Lab for Experimental Museology, ArtLab, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland; Cultural Leader speaking during the session: A History of China Explained: Confucianism at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Tianjin, People's Republic of China 2018
Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Thanachaiary
Today is December 6th, the 17th anniversary of the shooting at L'École Polytechnique Montréal, the School of Engineering at the University of Montréal. White ribbons are worn on this day to remember the fourteen women who were horribly killed by a crazed gunman in Montreal.
Many good people have suffered lasting effects from the shocking events of that evening: students who were terribly injured while attending a regular night of classes; those who witnessed innocent young lives tragically come to an end, and now must live with those painful memories; parents and family of the women who died now dealing with the incomprehensible empty place in their lives; the teachers and instructors who were helpless to prevent the attack; the police and emergency services who arrived inadequately prepared to stop the attack any sooner; and a city that was forever changed in how it understood violence against women, violence against society as a whole.
The candle in this photo was lit to remember those who died, but more importantly, those who still live so that none of us forgets. The pin that holds the ribbon was given to me by a police constable from the Montreal Urban Community Police Force. For many years I have been a volunteer involved in crime prevention and community policing, and I will always be thankful to our brave and valiant peace officers who serve and protect lives everyday.
With this candle, I say a prayer in memory of all those who were sadly affected by the tragedy of December 6, 1989, and for all those who have since become victims of violent crime.
Taken for the Active Assignment Weekly! group. This week's assignment: White Ribbon.
On September 24, 2013, Dr. Henry Markram, founder and Director of the Blue Brain Project and Professor of Neuroscience at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) speaks at the inaugural WIPO Forum 2013, “From Inspiration to Innovation: The Game-Changers” which brought together a panel of prominent and visionary innovators. The Forum was held during the WIPO Assemblies, which are meeting from September 23 to October 2, 2013.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 IGO License.
A candlelit vigil was held at the BC Legislature buildings to honour the memory of 14 female engineering students and staff who were murdered at École Polytechnique in Montreal in 1989.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Solar Impulse is a Swiss long-range solar powered aircraft project being undertaken at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The project eventually hopes to achieve the first circumnavigation of the Earth by a piloted fixed-wing aircraft using only solar power. The project is led by Swiss psychiatrist and aeronaut Bertrand Piccard, who co-piloted the first balloon to circle the world non-stop, and Swiss businessman André Borschberg.
Piccard initiated the Solar Impulse project in 2003. By 2009, he had assembled a multi-disciplinary team of 50 specialists from six countries, assisted by about 100 outside advisers. The project is financed by a number of private companies. The four main partners are Deutsche Bank, Omega SA, Solvay, and Schindler. Other partners include Bayer MaterialScience, Altran, Swisscom and Swiss Re (Corporate Solutions). Other supporters include Clarins, Semper, Toyota, BKW and STG. The EPFL, the European Space Agency (ESA) and Dassault have provided additional technical expertise, while Bay Area based SunPower provided the aircraft's photovoltaic cells.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Institut Polytechnique de Paris (IP Paris) attended the 6th edition of Viva Technology, Europe's largest startup and tech event, from June 15 to 18, 2022. IP Paris presented 21 startups from its three incubators: Drahi-X Novation Center, Télécom Paris Incubator and IMT Starter and/or founded by alumni of its five schools: École Polytechnique, ENSTA Paris, ENSAE Paris, Télécom Paris and Télécom SudParis.
© Institut Polytechnique de Paris - (photographer: Jérémy Barande)
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
France (91) - Essonne - Palaiseau
Ecole Polytechnique a ÈtÈ crÈe en 1794 comme l'Ecole centrale des travaux publics. Napoleon lui a donnÈ un statut militaire et un devise - "Pour la patrie, les sciences et la gloire".Ecole compte parmi ses ÈlËves ou son corps professoral de grands savant dont les noms sont attachÈs ‡ des contributions fondamentales de la connaissance.
Rolex Learning Center na Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Suíça. Projeto de Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa / SANAA. 2010.
Rolex Learning Center at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland. Designed by Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa / SANAA. 2010.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Sarah Kenderdine, Director, Lab for Experimental Museology, ArtLab, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland; Cultural Leader speaking during the Session "A History of China Explained: The Maritime Silk Road" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Tianjin, People's Republic of China 2018. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Jakob Polacsek
The coast of Belleville, 1868.
Born into a family originally from Pleyben, in Finistère in Brittany, Octave Penguilly L’Haridon enrolled at the Ecole Polytechnique in 1831. He rapidly combined his military career with training as an artist under the painter Charlet, without abandoning his duties as an officer and went on to become Director of the Musée de l’Artillerie in 1854. The painter exhibited works at the Salon from 1835 to 1870. Although he enjoyed portraying historical subjects in armour, both on canvas and in illustration, he is known today above all as one of the first and most original champions of the Breton landscape.
This originality earned him the admiration of Baudelaire in his reviews of the Salon, an enthusiasm which was shared by Théophile Gautier: “Far from paths trod by man, along deserted bays, and in creeks known only to seagulls and kittiwakes, he [Octave Penguilly L’Haridon] goes in search of rocks with strange and monstrous shapes, bizarrely jagged horizons, blue-green and cerulean seas. With the exactitude of a daguerreotype, he reproduces these locations in a scrupulously realistic fashion. You might think they came from the moon or Mars, they are so different from the sights one is accustomed to" (Abécédaire for the Salon of 1861, p 305).
With its rocky aspect and amazing composition containing a minimum amount of sky, this view of the Normandy coast at Belleville (Seine-Maritime) painted in 1868 is evocative of the almost fantastical world of the artist’s finest paintings. The marine landscape was presented at the Salon of 1869 (Côtes de Belleville, n° 1895) along with another variation on the theme of cliffs (The Spoonbills, n° 1894, acquired by the State and sent to the Musée des Beaux-Arts in La Rochelle) and is one of the last masterpieces by the artist, who died in 1870.
Petit Palais, Paris.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Pierre Boyer von der École Polytechnique präsentiert die Auswertung der Umfrageergebnisse.
Pierre Boyer from the École Polytechnique presents an analysis of the survey results.
Bildquelle: © Eric Berghen
Weitere Informationen zur Veranstaltungsreihe auf der ZEW-Webseite zu den ZEW Lunch Debates
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
Rolex Learning Center EFPL - Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne - architects SANAA - Sejima and Nishizawa -
The Rolex Learning Center will function as a laboratory for learning, a library with 500,000 volumes and an international cultural hub for EPFL, open to both students and the public. Spread over one single fluid space of 20,000 sq metres, it provides a seamless network of services, libraries, information gathering, social spaces, spaces to study, restaurants, cafes and beautiful outdoor spaces. It is a highly innovative building, with gentle slopes and terraces, undulating around a series of internal ‘patios’, with almost invisible supports for its complex curving roof, which required completely new methods of construction.
The thermal camera (top) on the opposite slope observes surface temperatures on the instrumented slope. Research project at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (ENAC / EFLUM) Photo: Andreas Christen, UBC. The lower camera takes visible images of the same subset.
Part of album Katabatibc flow on a steep slope
Marwan El Chazli, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale of Lausane during United Nations 75 with youth at the Graduate Institue in Geneva. 25 February 2020. UN Photo / Jean Marc Ferré
A candlelit vigil was held at the BC Legislature buildings to honour the memory of 14 female engineering students and staff who were murdered at École Polytechnique in Montreal in 1989.
On September 24, 2013, Dr. Henry Markram, founder and Director of the Blue Brain Project and Professor of Neuroscience at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) speaks at the inaugural WIPO Forum 2013, “From Inspiration to Innovation: The Game-Changers” which brought together a panel of prominent and visionary innovators. The Forum was held during the WIPO Assemblies, which are meeting from September 23 to October 2, 2013.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 IGO License.