Exposition internationale urbaine de Lyon

EXPO Lyon 1914
Overview
BIE-class Unrecognized exposition
Name L'exposition internationale urbaine de Lyon
Area 184.3 acres (74.6 ha)
Organized by Édouard Herriot
Location
Country France
City Lyon
Venue Gerland
Coordinates 45°43′48″N 4°49′30″E / 45.73000°N 4.82500°E / 45.73000; 4.82500
Timeline
Opening May 1, 1914 (1914-05-01)
Closure November 1, 1914 (1914-11-01)
Universal Expositions
Previous Exposition universelle et internationale (1913) in Ghent
Next Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco

The Exposition internationale urbaine de Lyon was the 1914 World's Fair in the French city of Lyon. The exposition focused on urban planning and public health. Lyon's mayor, Édouard Herriot, organised the exposition with the architect Tony Garnier and medical doctor Jules Courmont.[1]

In the Gerland neighbourhood, part of the 7th arrondissement of Lyon, a 184 acres exhibition area was created,[1] with the Tony Ganier exhibition hall, an Alpine village, a horticultural garden, several pavilions for foreign nations, and dedicated pavilions for the French colonies and the silk industry. On 1 May 1914, the exposition was opened and the French President, Raymond Poincaré, visited the exposition on 22 and 24 May.[2] The exposition was planned to last until 1 November but the First World War disturbed the plans and led to the forced closure of the Austrian and German pavilions on 2 August 1914.[3] After this, many other participants left the exposition and at the official closure on 1 November many pavilions had already been empty for a long time as a result. The remarkable Halle Tony Garnier,[1] was used as an arms factory during the war and afterwards used as slaughterhouse. In 1988, it was reconstructed as an exhibition and event center.

References

  1. 1 2 3 L’exposition internationale de Lyon en 1914, Patrimoine-lyon.org
  2. L’exposition internationale de Lyon en 1914, jital270, Les Biblioblog-trotters 3 February 2010
  3. Lyon, centre du monde !, Dossier de presse

External links


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