The Perret tower, originally called La tour pour regarder les montagnes ("The tower for watching the mountains"),[4] is an observation tower located in Grenoble, in the Paul Mistral public park. It is the first tower built in reinforced concrete in Europe.[5] In 1998, it was officially declared to be a national heritage site.[6] It was built for the International Exhibition of Hydropower and Tourism[7] where it was the orientation tower and the symbol of the exhibition. Nowadays, it is the last vestige of this exhibition.[7]
Perret tower | |
---|---|
La Tour Perret | |
General information | |
Status | interior closed to the public since 1960 |
Location | Grenoble, Paul Mistral park, France |
Coordinates | 45°11′05″N 5°44′07″E / 45.18472°N 5.735280°E |
Groundbreaking | 20 May 1924 |
Completed | 4 May 1925 (11 months) |
Opening | 6 September 1925, by Prime Minister Paul Painlevé, Edouard Herriot and André Hesse |
Cost | 385,000 FRF (in 1924) [2][3] |
Owner | Grenoble city |
Height | |
Antenna spire | 108 metres (354 ft) |
Roof | 95 metres (312 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | Ground floor and 3 patios [1] |
Lifts/elevators | 2 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Auguste and Gustave Perret |
Engineer | Auguste Perret |
Architecture
editPerret tower stands 95 metres (312 ft) tall. Its section is octagonal. Its foundations are 15 metres (49 ft) long,[8] made of 72 vertical stakes in reinforced concrete[8] gathered at the top by a slab and placed on a hard gravel layer. The framework is compound of eight vertical poles.[6] The tower diameter is 8 metres (26 ft) at the base.[9] The last floor is reachable by helical stairs (visible in the top openwork part) or by lift.[6]
Auguste Perret, with the assistance of Marie Dormoy, art critic, came to Grenoble for two years, to do conferences and meet political and artistic circles in order to promote a "reinforced concrete order"; a reference to the antique orders.
Made of the first reinforced concrete, the tower is also the first free-standing project made by Auguste Perret, its architect.
The tower is the sum of an architectural and structural thought particularly modern and exact. It is a reinforced concrete structure whose formworks are modular and repetitive, and the prefabricated fillings are re-used from the "Notre-Dame du Raincy" church. Despite criticism during its construction, it was later deemed a success and cost half as much as the other edifices of the exhibition.
It is also called the orientation tower, not because the four cardinal directions are molded at its top but because an orientation table sought by the Touring club de France, encircles it at the 60 metres (200 ft) level. This orientation table allowed tourists to locate the surrounding mountains with the pleasure to show a unique panorama on the Alps[6] and Grenoble because its height is about the same as the three towers of the Île Verte in Grenoble.
History
editIt was erected from 20 May 1924 to 4 May 1925 by the architect Auguste Perret who won a competition sponsored by the city for the exhibition, which took place between 21 May and 25 October 1925. The International Exhibition of Hydropower and Tourism focused on the production, transport and broadcast of electricity as well as tourism which was the No. 2 economic resource in the Alps at the beginning of the century. During the exhibition, a floodlight was installed at the top to light the buildings.[10]
On 6 September 1925, the exhibition was opened by Prime Minister Paul Painlevé, Édouard Herriot and André Hesse. The same day, more than 2,000 visitors reached the top of the tower by using the two elevators which drop them off to the orientation platform located at 60 metres (200 ft) height.[10] At lunch, Herriot and Hesse went down last and got stuck in an elevator, and the tower staff did not notice, creating some panic among the police services.[10]
The International Exhibition of Hydropower and Tourism was a success. More than one million persons came to the city of 85,000 inhabitants, which got benefits in spite of the huge works undertaken.
In 1929, an antenna was installed[10] at the top of the tower to broadcast radio programmes of the channel "Alpes-Grenoble".[11]
Nowadays, Perret Tower is the only remnant of the exhibition. This tower allowed Perret to prove the huge ability of reinforced concrete and make him famous as a great architect.
Today
editIn 1960, the tower was closed to the public due to its degradation.[12] In 1998, it was officially declared to be a national heritage site.[6] Currently, the top of the tower is illuminated during the winter and is used as a support for the fireworks of the 14th of July.
No serious maintenance was made after the exhibition, and the tower degradation might become irreversible: iron frameworks are unsheathed or broken and oxidization of the iron framework leads the reinforced concrete to crumble. In 1951, a facade screed was made (not efficient for life span).[13] In 2005, a study by Alain Tillier, chief architect of the national heritage sites, estimated the restoration cost at 4.5 million euros. No work was done, and the tower degradation got worse. In 2012, the Mouton study evaluated the cost at 6 million euros (inside and outside), of which 60% could be supported by a grant from the French government and from the local administrative department (Isère) because the tower is a national heritage site.[14] In these studies, the restoration includes the reopening to public as well as an upgrade to security standards.
The 12 September 2013, the petition "Save the Perret tower" was introduced.[15] It got more than 500 signatures during the first week and some local newspapers publicized the information.[16][17][18][19][20]
The 6 February 2014, the organisation "Ensemble pour la Tour Perret" ("Together for the Perret tower") was created to promote protection and restoration of the Perret tower, to publicize its history and its heritage interest and to ensure and contribute to its promotion.[13]
During the municipal elections in March 2014, some parties promised to act for the tower restoration: the list "Croire en Grenoble" (UMP, UDI, AEI),[21][13] the list "Imagine Grenoble" (Modem),[22][13] the list " Aimer Grenoble pour vous" (PS, PCF, Cap21, MRC, PRG, GE, GO Citoyenneté),[23][13] and the list "Grenoble une ville pour tous" (EELV, PG, Les Alternatifs, GA, ADES, Réseau Citoyen).[24][13]
Bibliography
edit- Cédric Avenier, L'ordre du béton. La tour Perret de Grenoble, CRAterre éditions, Labex AE&CC, ENSA Grenoble, mai 2013, 48 p.
- Cédric Avenier, Anne Coste, The Perret Tower : architecture, art and press (relations d’Auguste Perret avec le milieu artistique de son époque : projet de la Tour d’orientation de Grenoble), 4th international Congress on Construction History, Paris, juillet 2012.
- Cédric Avenier, Anne Coste, The Perret Tower : symbol of the 1925 International Hydro-electric Power Exhibition in Grenoble, and of the Cement and Concrete Industry, Engineering History and Heritage, ICE Publishing, London, décembre 2011.
- Cédric Avenier, Ciments de l’Isère, deux siècles d’innovation, DL les patrimoines, 2010, 80 p.
See also
edit- Tour Perret (Amiens), a skyscraper designed by Perret
References
edit- ^ (in French) La tour Perret Archived 22 October 2013 at archive.today
- ^ (in French) Faisons de la tour Perret un chantier pilote ! Archived 22 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine GRE City Local News, 18 September 2013
- ^ Cédric Avenier (May 2013). CRAterre éditions (ed.). L'ordre du béton (in French). Grenoble. p. 27.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Cédric Avenier (May 2013). L'ordre du béton (in French). Grenoble: CRAterre éditions. p. 43.
- ^ (in French) Tour Perret - Grenoble Archived 10 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine patrimoine-en-isère.fr
- ^ a b c d e Base Mérimée: PA00117204, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French) Tour Perret, située dans le parc Paul-Mistral
- ^ a b (in French) Modern and contemporary heritage Archived 16 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Cédric Avenier (May 2013). L'ordre du béton (in French). Grenoble: CRAterre éditions. p. 33.
- ^ Cédric Avenier (May 2013). L'ordre du béton (in French). Grenoble: CRAterre éditions. p. 31.
- ^ a b c d Cédric Avenier (May 2013). L'ordre du béton (in French). Grenoble: CRAterre éditions. p. 37.
- ^ (in French) Alpes-Grenoble
- ^ La tour Perret en quelques dates Archived 21 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine sur City Local News : « 1960 [...] il est décidé de fermer l’édifice au public, l’escalier et les ascenseurs étant devenus quasiment impraticables. »
- ^ a b c d e f (in French) Blog Sauvons la tour Perret. Pétition pour la sauvegarde de la tour
- ^ Blog Sauvons la tour Perret
- ^ Sauvons la tour Perret de Grenoble sur www.petitions24.net
- ^ Grenoble: une pétition pour "sauver la Tour Perret" Le Dauphiné Libéré, 17 septembre 2013
- ^ Une pétition pour "sauver la tour Perret" Archived 22 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine GRE City Local News, 18 septembre 2013
- ^ Il faut sauver la Tour Perret 20 minutes, 19 septembre 2013
- ^ Tour Perret : la polemique relancée Place GRE'NET, 19 septembre 2013
- ^ Pétition "Sauvons la tour Perret" Fédération des Associations Patrimoniales de l'Isère (FAPI)
- ^ (in French) Liste Croire en Grenoble (UMP, UDI, AEI), Matthieu Chamussy, Voir p. 4 et p. 11
- ^ (in French) Liste Imagine Grenoble (Modem), Philippe de Longevialle, Voir p. 7 Archived 26 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ (in French) Liste Aimer Grenoble pour vous (PS, PCF, Cap21, MRC, PRG, GE, GO Citoyenneté), Jérôme Safar, Voir p. 42 Archived 26 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ (in French) Liste Grenoble une ville pour tous (EELV, PG, Les Alternatifs, GA, ADES, Réseau Citoyen), Éric Piolle, Voir point 87