Jean-Rodolphe Perronet (27 October 1708 – 27 February 1794) was a French architect and structural engineer known for his many stone arch bridges. His best-known work is the Pont de la Concorde (1787).
Perronet was born in Suresnes, a suburb of Paris, the son of a Swiss Guardsman.
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At age 17, he entered the architectural practice of Jean-Baptiste-Augustin Beausire, an engineer and『maître des bâtiments』to the city of Paris, as an apprentice. [1] He was put in charge of the design and construction of Paris's grand sewer, embankment works, and the maintenance of the banlieue's roads. In 1735, he was named sous-ingénieur (under-engineer) to Alençon and in 1736 entered the Corps des ponts et chaussées.[1] In 1737, he became sous-ingénieur, then engineer to the généralitéofAlençon.
Bust of Jean-Rodolphe Perronet, 1785 CE. From Paris, France. By Jean-Baptiste Pigalle. The Victoria and Albert Museum, London
In 1747, Perronet was named director of the Bureau des dessinateurs du Roi (Royal Office of Designers), which had also just put Daniel-Charles Trudaine in charge of producing maps and plans for the kingdom. This first École des ponts et chaussées was based in the hôtel Libéral Bruant in Paris. Perronet was given the task of training bridge and road engineers and overseeing their work in the généralités in which they worked. The Bureau became the Bureau des élèves des ponts et chaussées, then in 1775 was renamed the École des ponts et chaussées. Perronet was to direct it for the rest of his life.[1] As its organizer, inspiration, and teacher, Perronet was his students' spiritual father and used a new teaching method that seems very contemporary to modern eyes. During this time, he became friends with the Swiss bridge-builder Charles Labelye.
In 1750, Perronet was promoted to inspector general (inspecteur général), and by 1763, he had become first engineer for bridges (Premier ingénieur du Roi).[2][1]
He died on 27 February 1794 in Paris, aged 85. The street next to the site of the École des ponts et chaussées (delimiting Paris's 6th and 7th arrondissements) is now named after him and a statue of him, sculpted by Adrien Étienne Gaudez, has been erected on the northeast corner of the Île de Puteaux, at the foot of the pont de Neuilly (whose first stone version, built in 1772 and surviving until 1942, was his work).
(in French) Guy Coriono, 250 ans de l’École des Ponts en cent portraits, Paris, Presses de l’École nationale des Ponts et Chaussées, 1997, p. 37 and following.
(in French) M. Guillot,『Un destin helvétique, Jean-Rodophe Perronet et sa famille suresnoise (1708–1794)』in Les gardes suisses et leurs familles au XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles en région parisienne, p. 108–116.
(in French) Yvon Michel,『Jean-Rodolphe Perronet (1708–1794)』in Monuments Historiques, Paris, April–June 1987, nos 150–151, p. 81–86.
(in French) Claude Vacant, Jean-Rodolphe Perronet (1708–1794). Premier inégénieur du Roi et directeur de l'École des ponts et chaussées, Paris, Presses de l'École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées, 2006. 24 cm, 344 p., ill.
^ abcde The library of Jean Rodolphe Perronet, Middleton, Robin, Scholion, 2012, Vol.7, p.133, Schwabe, ISSN: 1424-1854, DOI: 10.5169/seals-720006, E-Periodica Journals
^Vacant, Claude. Jean Rodolphe Perronet (1708-1794): premier ingénieur du roi et directeur de l'École des ponts et chaussées. Presses Ponts et Chaussées, 2006.