Le parc de la Sauvagère (en néerlandais : Sauvagèrepark) est un parc paysager de la commune d'Uccle, dans la région de Bruxelles-Capitale en Belgique, datant de la fin du XIXe siècle. Librement inspiré du parc à l'anglaise, il offre un cadre paisible pour les promeneurs et possède également un étang, une plaine de jeux pour les enfants ainsi que des enclos à animaux.
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The Lycée français Jean Monnet de Bruxelles, or LFB, is a school located in Uccle, Brussels, Belgium.
It is directly operated by the Agency for French Education Abroad, an agency of the French government. The LFB follows the French study curriculum and has students from nursery school up to the French baccalauréat. As of 2020, the school hosted about 2719 students.
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The Villa Bloemenwerfʋɛrf]) is the former residence of the Belgian painter, architect and interior designer Henry van de Velde, built in 1895. It is located at 102, avenue Vanderaey/Vanderaeylaan in the Uccle municipality of Brussels, Belgium. Van de Velde designed the house and its interior, as well as the furnishings, partially drawing inspiration from William Morris' Red House in Bexleyheath, London. Maria Sèthe, his future wife, designed the garden surrounding the house.
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Bogaerts International School is an international K-12 school founded in 2011 by Yann Bogaerts located in Uccle. The school is located on the outskirts of Brussels, in an area classed as semi-urban while the campus is in a wooded area. The school offers an education to both local Belgian and foreign families.
The school follows an international baccalaureate curriculum. The school offers a continuum of three programmes of education: the Primary Years Programme, Middle Years Programme and Diploma Programme.
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The Chaussée d'Alsemberg or Alsembergsesteenwegx.səˌsteːn.ʋɛx]) is a major north–south road in Belgium, forming part of the N235. It runs from the Barrière de Saint-Gilles/Bareel van Sint-Gillis in the Brussels municipality of Saint-Gilles to the town of Braine-l'Alleud, covering almost 5.5 kilometres within the Brussels-Capital Region. Along its route, it passes through the municipalities of Forest, Uccle, Drogenbos, Linkebeek, Beersel and Alsemberg.
Until nos. 139 and 156, the road lies on the territory of Saint-Gilles. Within Forest, where only a short section of the road is located, it borders the Altitude Cent/Hoogte Honderd area to the west and Berkendael/Berkendaal to the east. After this, the street enters Uccle, crosses the N261 at Globe, then continues southwards until Calevoet/Kalevoet. Beyond the Brussels Region, it continues towards the south-east through Linkebeek and Beersel before reaching Alsemberg, where it changes its name to become the Eigenbrakelsesteenweg until the regional border. In Braine-l'Alleud, it becomes the Chaussée d'Alsemberg again.
The Chaussée d'Alsemberg has long been an important transport and commercial axis. Since the 19th century, it has been lined with residential buildings, shops and workshops, while public transport, including trams, has reinforced its role as a link between central Brussels and the southern periphery.
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Uccle-Calevoet railway station or Ukkel-Kalevoet railway station is a railway station in the municipality of Uccle in Brussels, Belgium. The station is operated by the National Railway Company of Belgium and located on line 124, between Uccle-Stalle and Linkebeek railway stations. It is named after the Calevoet/Kalevoet neighbourhood in Uccle.
Trains calling at this station are local trains running from Nivelles to Brussels-North and Antwerpen-Centraal. The station is connected to Brussels tram route 51, as well as bus routes 43 and 60.
Ce parc est établi sur l'ancien domaine d'un château abandonné, démoli en 1957. Les terrains furent acquis par la commune d'Uccle en 1964.