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Fulgence Bienvenüe

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Name
  
Fulgence Bienvenue

Role
  
Civil engineer

Education
  
Ecole Polytechnique




Died
  
August 3, 1936, Paris, France

Photo de classe 1s1 fulgence bienvenue


Fulgence Bienvenüe (27 January 1852 – 3 August 1936) was a noted French civil engineer, best known for his role in the construction of the Paris Métro, and has been called "Le Père du Métro" (Father of the Metro).

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Fulgence Bienvenüe httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediabr773Ful

A native of Uzel in Brittany, and the son of a notary, in 1872 Bienvenüe graduated from the École Polytechnique as a civil engineer and the same year he began working for the Department of Bridges and Roads at Alençon. His first assignment was the construction of new railway lines in the Mayenne area, in the course of which his left arm had to be amputated after being crushed in a construction accident.

Fulgence Bienvenüe Fulgence Bienvene le pre du mtro parisien

In 1886, Bienvenüe moved on to Paris to design and supervise the construction of aqueducts for the city, drawing water from the Aube and Loire Rivers. Next, he built a cable railway near the Place de la Republique and created the park of Buttes-Chaumont. In 1891, he was appointed as Engineer-in-Chief for Bridges and Roads, the most prestigious engineering job in France.

Fulgence Bienvenüe BIENVENE Fulgence 18521936

Paris city officials selected Bienvenüe to become chief engineer for the Paris Métro in 1896. He designed a special way of building new tunnels which allowed the swift repaving of the roads above; this involved (among other things) building the crown of the tunnel first and the floor last, the reverse of the usual method at that time. Bienvenüe has the credit for the mostly swift and relatively uneventful construction of the Métro through the difficult and heterogenous Parisian soils and rocks. He came up with the idea of freezing wet and unstable soil in order to permit the drilling of tunnels. He was to supervise the Paris Metro construction for more than three decades, finally retiring on 6 December 1932.

Fulgence Bienvenüe BIENVENE Fulgence 18521936

Bienvenüe's construction of the Métro was widely praised and has been described admiringly as a work "worthy of the Romans". He eventually accumulated many honors for his engineering accomplishments, including the Grand Prix Berger of the Academy of Arts and Sciences (1909) and the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor (1929).

Fulgence Bienvenüe 1900 Bienvene dans le METRO 1 LA PLUME ET LE ROULEAU

On 30 June 1933, the Avenue du Maine station on the Metro was renamed Bienvenüe in his honor. The naming ceremony took place in his presence; there was a last-minute scramble to repaint the station's new nameboards when it was discovered that the unusual diaeresis in his name had been omitted, making it the French word for "welcome". In 1942 the station was linked to the adjacent Montparnasse station, forming a single station named Montparnasse-Bienvenüe.

Following his death in 1936, Bienvenüe was buried at the Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris.

A high school in Côtes-d'Armor commune in Brittany is named after Bienvenüe, Lycée Fulgence Bienvenüe de Loudeac, part of the Académie de Rennes.

Episode 1 - Fulgence Bienvenüe


References

Fulgence Bienvenüe Wikipedia