Louis Roelandt

Louis Roelandt
Born 3 January 1786
Nieuwpoort, Belgium
Died 5 April 1864(1864-04-05) (aged 78)
Ghent, Belgium
Nationality Belgian
Occupation Architect
Buildings

Law Courts of Ghent (Justitiepaleis)
Vlaamse Opera in Ghent

Aula Magna of the Ghent University
Law Courts of Ghent (Justitiepaleis)
Law Courts of Ghent, lateral façade
Town Hall of Aalst

Louis Roelandt or Lodewijk Joseph Adriaan Roelandt with his full Dutch name, was a Belgian architect that played an important role in the evolution of Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Classical architecture in Belgium.

During the period that Belgium belonged to the First French Empire, Roelandt, who had studied at the Académie of Ghent, was selected to continue his education at the prestigious "Ecole Spéciale d'Architecture" in Paris. Like his compatriot Tilman-François Suys he was a pupil of Charles Percier and Pierre François Léonard Fontaine.

In 1818 he was appointed as architect to the city of Ghent where he would realise the majority of his future projects. Gradually Roelandt moved away from the severe Empire Style in which he had been trained, and introduced more and more Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Baroque features into his designs. He also built churches in an early Gothic Revival style, such as the Sint-Annakerk in Ghent.

Works

References

Church of Saint Anna in Ghent with unfinished tower
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