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Lausanne is located at the limit between the extensive wine-growing regions of Lavaux (to the east) and la Côte (to the west). Lausanne has an area, as of 2014, of 41.38–41.37 square kilometers (15.98–15.97 sq mi) (depending on calculation
Map of Vaud. Coordinates: Country ... and France to the west. ... The major population centres of the canton are: Lausanne (140,202 inhabitants on 31 December 2020), ...
[citation needed] Following the rise of Geneva it became Lac de Genève [5] (translated into English as Lake Geneva), but Le Léman was the common name on all local maps [6] [7] and is the customary name in the French language. In contemporary English, the name Lake Geneva has become predominant. [4]
In Lausanne about 66,152 or (33.0%) of the population have completed non-mandatory upper secondary education, and 35,615 or (17.8%) have completed additional higher education (either University or a Fachhochschule). Of the 35,615 who completed tertiary schooling, 42.1% were Swiss men, 30.1% were Swiss women, 16.1% were non-Swiss men and 11.7% ...
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Aerial view from 300 m by Walter Mittelholzer (1919) Ouchy harbour (2007) The Château d'Ouchy (2009) The Lausanne CGN boat in Ouchy (2007). Ouchy is a port and a popular lakeside resort south of the centre of Lausanne in Switzerland, at the edge of Lake Geneva (French: lac Léman).
Up until the early 1990s, The Flon was considered a bad area of Lausanne. The Group Lausanne-Ouchy SA decided to start major work in accordance with their Plan partiel d'affectation which was divided into two parts (Flon Flon vision 1 and vision 2). In June 1999 the Municipal Council adopted the Lausanne PPP.
École spéciale de Lausanne, 1857 Louis Rivier, founding member of École spéciale de Lausanne. The roots of modern-day EPFL can be traced back to the foundation of a private school under the name École spéciale de Lausanne in 1853 at the initiative of Louis Rivier, a graduate of the École Centrale Paris and John Gay, the then professor and rector of the Académie de Lausanne.