Monuments (1883) on the
Place de la Nation (1899) Most of the notable monuments of the
Belle Époque were constructed for use at the Universal Expositions, for example the
Eiffel Tower, the
Grand Palais, the
Petit Palais, and the
Pont Alexandre III. The chief architectural legacy of the Third Republic was a large number of new schools and local city halls, all inscribed with the slogans of the republic and statues of allegorical symbols of the republic; representations of scientists, writers and political figures were placed in parks and squares. The largest monument was an allegorical statue of the republic erected in the center of the Place du Château-d'Eau, renamed the
Place de la République in 1879. It was an enormous bronze figure 9.5 meters high of the republic holding an olive branch and standing on a pedestal 15 meters high. On 14 July 1880, the Place du Trône was renamed the
Place de la Nation, and a group of statues by
Jules Dalou, called
Triumph of the Republic, was placed in the center. In the middle was
Marianne in a chariot drawn by two lions surrounded by allegorical figures of Liberty, Work, Justice and Abundance. A plaster version was put in place in 1889, the bronze version in 1899. A 29-meter tall monument with a statue of another republican hero,
Leon Gambetta, surmounted by a
pylon crowned by a winged lion, was placed in the
Cour Napoléon of the
Louvre in 1888. It was taken down in 1954 after destructions during World War II, but some remaining sculptures including that of Gambetta himself were placed in 1982 in the Square Édouard-Vaillant (
20th arrondissement) by the socialist president
François Mitterrand.
Streets and boulevards (1910), with its
Art Nouveau façade, reflected the abandonment of the strict façade uniformity of Haussmann's Paris The construction of the new boulevards and streets begun by Napoleon III and
Baron Haussmann had been much criticized by Napoleon's opponents near the end of the Second Empire, but the government of the Third Republic continued his projects. The
Avenue de l'Opéra,
Boulevard Saint-Germain, Avenue de la République, Boulevard Henry-IV and Avenue Ledru-Rollin were all completed by 1889 essentially as Haussmann had planned them before his death. After 1889, the pace of construction slowed but a few last projects such as the
Boulevard Raspail were completed.
rue Réaumur In 1898 the
Rue Réaumur was extended, and has become known as a high point of post-Haussmannian architecture. An annual
Concours competition was launched by the Conseil Municipal of the Third Republic, to attract innovative architectural solutions, now that the Haussman rules had been relaxed. This resulted in several awards for outstanding decorative architecture along the rue Réaumur, including number 116 by Albert Walwein (1851-1916) and number 118 by Charles de Montarnal (1867-1947), which won gold medals in 1897 and 1900 respectively. The new street was inaugurated on 7th February 1897 by Felix Faure, president of the Third Republic, with Pierre Baudin, president of the Conseil Municipal de Paris. Rue Réaumur became known for being a hub for the press, with
L'Intransigeant,
Franc Tireur,
France-Soir, Défence de la France,
L'Algérie Libre, and
La Petite République located at 98-100. Several new streets were created on the left bank: the Rue de la Convention, Rue de Vouillé,
Rue d'Alésia, and Rue de Tolbiac. On the Right Bank, the Rue Étienne-Marcel was the last of the Haussmann projects to be completed before the First World War. While the streets planned by Haussmann were completed, the strict uniformity of façades and building heights imposed by him was gradually modified. Buildings became much larger and deeper, with two apartments on each floor facing the street and others facing only onto the courtyard. The new buildings often had ornamental rotundas or pavilions on the corners and highly ornamental roof designs and gables. In 1902, maximum building heights were increased to 52 meters. With the advent of elevators, the most desirable apartments were no longer on the lowest floors, but on the highest floors, where there was more light, nicer views and less noise. With the arrival of automobiles and the beginning of traffic noise on the streets, the bedrooms moved to the back of the apartment, overlooking the courtyard. The façades also changed from the strict symmetry of Haussmann: undulating façades appeared, as did bay and bow windows. Eclectic façades became popular; they often mixed the styles of
Louis XIV,
Louis XV and
Louis XVI, and then, with the advent of
Art Nouveau style, floral patterns could be incorporated. The most striking examples of the new architecture were the
Castel Béranger on the Rue La Fontaine and the
Hôtel Lutetia. Between 1898 and 1905, the city organized eight competitions for the most imaginative building façades; variety was given precedence over uniformity. .
Architecture department store (1875)] Following the relaxation of the strict rules of Baron Haussman's era, the architectural style of the
Belle Époque was eclectic and sometimes combined elements of several different styles. While the structures of the new buildings were resolutely modern, using iron frames and reinforced concrete, the façades ranged from the
Romano-Byzantine style of the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur on Montmartre, to the strange
neo-Moorish Palais du Trocadéro, to the
neo-Renaissance style of the new Hôtel de Ville, to the exuberant reinvention of
French classicism of the 17th and
18th centuries in the
Grand Palais,
Petit Palais and Gare d'Orsay, decorated as they are with
domes,
colonnades,
mosaics and statuary. The most innovative buildings of the period were the
Gallery of Machines at the 1889 exposition and the new railroad stations and department stores: their classical exteriors concealed very modern interiors with large open spaces and large glass skylights made possible by the new engineering techniques of the period. The Eiffel Tower shocked many traditional Parisians, both because of its appearance and because it was the first building in Paris taller than the cathedral of Notre-Dame.
Art Nouveau became the most striking stylistic innovation of the period in architecture. It is associated particularly with the metro station entrances designed by
Hector Guimard and a handful of buildings, including Guimard's
Castel Béranger (1889) at 14 Rue La Fontaine and the Hôtel Mezzara (1910) in the
16th arrondissement. The enthusiasm for Art Nouveau metro station entrances did not last long; in 1904 it was replaced at the
Opéra metro station by a less exuberant "modern" style. Beginning in 1912, all the Guimard metro entrances were replaced with functional entrances without decoration. A revolutionary new building material,
reinforced concrete, appeared at the beginning of the 20th century and quietly began to change the face of Paris. The first church built in the new material was
Saint-Jean de Montmartre, at 19 Rue des Abbesses at the foot of Montmartre. The architect was
Anatole de Baudot, a student of
Viollet-le-Duc. The nature of the revolution was not evident, because Baudot faced the concrete with brick and ceramic tiles in a colorful Art Nouveau style with stained glass windows in the same style. The Conseil Municipal of Paris instituted an architecture prize, named the
Concours de façades de la ville de Paris inspired by a similar contest in Brussels, shortly after the creation of the
Rue Réaumur in 1897. The aim was to promote inventive design and construction in new buildings on this street. The contest was initially restricted to the Rue Réaumur, but was ultimately extended to the whole of Paris. The awards were inaugurated in a ceremony led by president Felix Faure, and made annually from 16th December 1897 to the late 1930s, with an interruption during World War I, singling out several buildings completed every year for praise.In 1904 the jury was made up of five members of the Conseil Municipal : Quentin-Bauchart, Ernest Caron, Froment-Meurice, Chérioux, Ballières, Joseph Antoine Bouvard, director of Architectural Services, and Nicolas Sauger (1838-1918), architectural overseer for the city of Paris, with Jean-Louis Pascal and Joseph Auguste Émile Vaudremer. The
Théâtre des Champs-Élysées (1913) is another architectural landmark of the period, one of the few Paris buildings in the
Art Deco style. Designed by
Auguste Perret, it was also built of reinforced concrete and decorated by some of the leading artists of the era:
bas-reliefs on the façade by
Antoine Bourdelle, a dome by
Maurice Denis, and paintings in the interior by
Édouard Vuillard. It was the setting in 1913 for one of the major musical events of the
Belle Époque: the premiere of
Igor Stravinsky's
The Rite of Spring. File:Le sacre coeur (paris - france).jpg|The
Romano-Byzantine style of the
Basilica of Sacré-Cœur (1873-1919) File:Béroud - Le dôme central de la galerie des machines à l'exposition universelle de 1889 - P2314 - Musée Carnavalet (cropped).jpg|The
Gallery of Machines from the
Universal Exposition of 1889 File:Paris 16 - Castel Béranger -1.JPG|The
Castel Béranger by
Hector Guimard (1899) File:Main entrance of Grand Palais, Paris July 2014.jpg|The
Grand Palais (1900) File:St Jean de Montmartre.jpg|The Church of
Saint-Jean-de-Montmartre (1894-1904), the first church built of
reinforced concrete File:Theatre-des-champs-elysees-.jpg|The
Théâtre des Champs-Élysées (1913) in
Art Deco style
Bridges and the
Grand Palais, legacies of the Paris
Universal Exposition of 1900] Eight new bridges were put across the Seine during the
Belle Époque. The
Pont Sully, built in 1876, replaced two foot bridges that had connected the
Île Saint-Louis to the Right and Left Bank. The
Pont de Tolbiac was built in 1882 to connect the Left Bank with
Bercy. The
Pont Mirabeau, made famous in a poem by
Apollinaire, was dedicated in 1895. Three bridges were built for the 1900 Exposition: the
Pont Alexandre-III, dedicated by Czar
Nicholas II of Russia in 1896, which connected the Left Bank with the grand exposition halls of the
Grand Palais and
Petit Palais; the
Passerelle Debilly, a foot bridge that linked two sections of the Exposition; and a railroad bridge between Grenelle and Passy. Two more bridges were dedicated in 1905: the Pont de Passy (now the
Pont de Bir-Hakeim), and the
Viaduc d'Austerlitz, crossed by the metro.
Parks, gardens and squares , the
Gardens of the Trocadéro displayed the full-size head of the
Statue of Liberty (
Liberty Enlightening the World) before the statue was completed and shipped to
New York City. The work of creating parks, squares and promenades during the
Belle Époque continued in the Second Empire style. The projects were managed at first by
Jean-Charles Adolphe Alphand, who had been the head of department of parks and promenades under Haussmann and was elevated to the post of Director of Public Works of Paris, a position he held until his death in 1891. He was also the director of works of the 1889 Universal Exposition, responsible for building the exposition's gardens and pavilions. Alphand finished several of the projects begun under Haussmann: the
Parc Montsouris (1869–1878), the Square Boucicaut (1873), and the Square Popincourt (later renamed Parmentier, and still later Maurice-Gardette), which replaced a demolished slaughterhouse and opened in 1872. Alphand's first major project of the
Belle Époque was the
Jardins du Trocadéro, the site of the Universal Exposition of 1878 that surrounded the enormous Palais de Trocadéro, which served as the main building for the exposition. He filled the park with a grotto, fountains, gardens and statues (the statues can now be seen on the parvis of the
Musée d'Orsay). The park also displayed the full-sized head of the
Statue of Liberty (
Liberty Enlightening the World) before the statue was completed and shipped to
New York City. The grotto and much of the park are still preserved as they were. It was used again for the Universal Exposition of 1889 Exposition, and with new fountains and a new palace added, it was also used for the Universal Exposition of 1937. During the exposition of 1878, Alphand used the
Champ de Mars as the site of a huge iron-framed exhibit hall, 725 meters long, surrounded by gardens. For the 1889 exposition, the same site was occupied by the Eiffel Tower and the huge Gallery of Machines, plus two large exhibit halls: the Palace of Liberal Arts and the Palace of Fine Arts. The two palaces were designed by
Jean-Camille Formigé, the chief architect of Paris. The two palaces and the Gallery of Machines were demolished after the exposition, but in 1909, Formigé was given the task of transforming the exposition site around the Eiffel Tower into a park with broad lawns, promenades and groves of trees in the form it is today. (1898), next to the
Bois de Boulogne, provided trees, shrubs and flowers for all the parks of Paris Between 1895 and 1898, Formigé created another
Belle Époque landmark, the
Serres d'Auteuil, a complex of large greenhouses designed to grow trees and plants for all the gardens and parks of Paris. The largest structure, one hundred meters long, was designed to grow tropical plants. The greenhouses still exist today and are open to the public. Other than the parks of the expositions, no other large Paris parks were created in the
Belle Époque, but several squares of about one hectare each were created. They all had the same basic design: a bandstand in the center, a fence, groves of trees and flower beds, and often also statues. These included the Square Édouard-Vaillant in the 20th arrondissement (1879), the Square Samuel-de-Champlain in the 20th arrondissement (1889), the Square des Épinettes in the 17th arrondissement (1893), the Square Scipion in the 5th arrondissement (1899), the Square Paul-Painlevé in the 5th arrondissement (1899) and the Square Carpeaux in the 18th arrondissement (1907). The best-known and most picturesque park of the period is that composed of the Squares Willette and Nadar on the slope directly below the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur on Montmartre. It was begun by Formigé in 1880, but not completed until 1927 by another architect, Léopold Béviére, after the death of Formigé in 1926. The park features terraces and slopes dropping eighty meters from the Basilica to the street below, and has one of the best-known views in Paris.
Street lighting (1878) At the beginning of the
Belle Époque, Paris was lit by a constellation of thousands of
gaslights that were often admired by foreign visitors. It was at the beginning of 1876 that Paris began to be called the “City of Light(s)” (Ville-Lumière), initially in an ideological sense, before gradually coming to refer to the city’s illumination itself . In 1870, there were 56,573 gaslights used exclusively to illuminate the streets of the city. The gas was produced by ten enormous factories around the edge of the city that were located near the circle of fortifications. It was distributed in pipes installed under the new boulevards and streets. The street lights were placed every twenty meters on the Grands Boulevards. At a predetermined minute after nightfall, a small army of 750 uniformed
allumeurs ("lighters") carrying long poles with small lamps at the end went out into the streets to turn on a pipe of gas inside each lamppost and light the lamp. The entire city was illuminated within forty minutes. The Arc de Triomphe was crowned with a ring of gaslights, and the
Champs-Élysées was lined with ribbons of white light. One of the major urban innovations in Paris was the introduction of
electric street lights to coincide with the opening of the Universal Exposition of 1878. The first streets lit were the Avenue de l'Opéra and the Place de l'Étoile around the Arc de Triomphe. In 1881, electric street lights were added along the Grands Boulevards. Electric lighting came much more slowly for residences and businesses in some Paris neighborhoods. While electric lights lined the Champs-Élysées in 1905, there was no electric lines for any households in the 20th arrondissement. == The Paris Universal Expositions ==