탭하여 살펴보기
You are at the top of the Eiffel Tower, overlooking Paris at a height of almost 300 m / 1000 feet.
탭하여 살펴보기
At the opening of the Tower in 1889, this very place was different from what you are seeing.
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Le Campanile et le Phare de la tour Eiffel - Les merveilles de l'Exposition 1889Eiffel Tower
It was used, in particular, as a laboratory to carry out scientific experiments and measurements. Many instruments were installed here such as barometers, anemometers, lightning conductors.
In fact, Gustave Eiffel arranged an office for himself at the very top of the Tower for astronomical and physiological observations. He even installed a weather station.
It was these scientific experiments carried at the Tower which saved it from being destroyed by popular demand. Did you know the Tower should have been pulled down just 20 years after it was erected for the 1889 Exposition Universelle!
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Affiche - Chemin de fer Paris-Lyon-Méditerranée - Exposition Universelle 1889 - ParisEiffel Tower
For the 1889 Universal Exhibition, marking the centenary of the French Revolution, a great competition was announced in the country's Official Gazette.
Universal exhibitions were a technological and industrial showcase for nations, testifying to the achievements made during the industrial revolution.
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Le Champ de Mars et l'Ecole Militaire depuis les hauteurs du Trocadéro avant la construction de la tour EiffelEiffel Tower
The 1889 competition consisted of "studying the possibility of erecting on the Champ-de-Mars a 300-metre tower with a 125m2 square base".
The Champ-de-Mars and the Military school as seen from the Trocadéro before the construction of the Eiffel Tower.
Selected from among 107 projects, it was that of Gustave Eiffel, an entrepreneur, Maurice Koechlin and Emile Nouguier, both engineers, and Stephen Sauvestre, an architect, that was accepted.
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Gustave Eiffel en pied dans l'escalier de la tour EiffelEiffel Tower
A brilliant engineer, Gustave Eiffel founded a company specialising in metal structural work.
In this sense the Eiffel Tower was the very height of his career. He devoted the last thirty years of his life to experimental research.
This enthusiast and true genius was able to transcend his own limits to leave us monuments such as the dome on the Nice Observatory, the metal structure of the Statue of Liberty and the Bordeaux railway bridge.
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Bureau des Etudes de Gustave Eiffel - La Tour Soleil de Bourdais, projet concurrent de la tour Eiffel (calque à la plume)Eiffel Tower
The competition held at the time of the 1889 Exposition Universelle received several other entries for 300-metre towers.
A serious component was the project of Jules Bourdais, he was the architect of Palais du Trocadéro.
He imagined a tower of 300 m based only of stone.
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Dessin projet de MM Eiffel, Nouguier et KoechlinEiffel Tower
In June 1884, Emile Nouguier and Maurice Koechlin, the two chief engineers in Eiffel's company, came up with the idea of building a very tall tower. It was to be designed like a large pylon.
It would have four columns of latticework girders, separated at the base and coming together at the top, and joined to each other by more metal girders at regular intervals.
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Pylône de 300m de hauteur pour la ville de Paris - 1889 - Avant Projet de MM Nouguier et KoechlinEiffel Tower
The company had by this time perfectly mastered the principle of building bridge supports. The tower project was a bold extension of this principle up to a height of 300 metres - equivalent to the symbolic figure of 1,000 feet.
The company had by this time perfectly mastered the principle of building bridge supports. The tower project was a bold extension of this principle up to a height of 300 metres - equivalent to the symbolic figure of 1,000 feet.
© Collection tour Eiffel의 Reproductions des planches originales de Gustave EiffelEiffel Tower
On 18 September 1884, Eiffel registered a patent “for a new configuration allowing the construction of metal supports and pylons capable of exceeding a height of 300 metres”.
Sauvestre proposed stonework pedestals to dress the legs, monumental arches to link the four columns and the first level, large glass-walled halls on each level, a bulb-shaped design for the top and various other ornamental features to decorate the whole of the structure.
The first floor - Copy of Gustave Eiffel's original plates
The second floor - Copy of Gustave Eiffel's original plates
The top - Copy of Gustave Eiffel's original plates
Antennas - Copy of Gustave Eiffel's original plates
The first digging work started on 26 January 1887 and marked the beginning of the Tower's construction.
Conception—Société d'Exploitation de la Tour Eiffel