Education
He studied pharmacy at the University of Liège, afterwards travelling to Switzerland, where he befriended botanist Henri François Pittier, with whom he collaborated on studies of Swiss flora.
He studied pharmacy at the University of Liège, afterwards travelling to Switzerland, where he befriended botanist Henri François Pittier, with whom he collaborated on studies of Swiss flora.
When Pittier later moved to Costa Rica, he provided Durand with dried specimens for study purposes. Beginning in 1879, he was associated with the National Botanic Garden of Belgium, where in 1901, he succeeded François Crépin as its director In 1910 he was appointed president of the International Botanical Congress, held in Brussels.
He also made significant contributions to the "Index Kewensis" (first supplement, 1901-1906).
Some plants with the specific epithet of durandii commemorate his name, an example being Celtis durandii (family Cannabaceae).