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- L'auteur
- 23 x 28.5 cm
- 176 pages
- 170 black and white and color illustrations
- ISBN: 978-2-9092-8303-6
- Text in French only
- (dir.) Maurice Culot
- (préface) Marcel Boiteux
- auteurs : Bruno Foucart, Hugues Fibec, Martin Meade, Élisabeth Vitou, Jean-Baptiste Minnaert, Bernard Marrey, Claude Parent, Jean-Paul Midant
Electricity has transformed the way of life of our contemporaries. Since the end of the 19th century, the production, transformation and distribution of electricity have given rise to original architecture. This book retraces the journey of creators who, for a century in France, expressed through their art the modernity of electrical energy. From 1900, Paul Friesé played a fundamental role in defining the program and aesthetics of the modern factory in France, notably through the construction of some twenty electrical substations in Paris. In 1928, Georges-Henri Pingusson created the Vitry-Sud thermal power station which constituted a manifesto of industrial aesthetics. In the 1930s, Pierre Barbe, architect for the Compagnie du Nord, was a defender of indirect lighting. The 1940s and 1950s were marked by the internationally renowned multi-arch dams created by engineer André Coyne. Finally, the 1970s saw the birth of the architecture of the atom, illustrated by Claude Parent's nuclear power plants.