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Cast iron made its debut in the construction industry
in 1779 with the bridge at Coalbrookdale in England, followed
in 1803 by the Pont des Arts bridge in Paris. Metal structures
soon began to find their way into textile factories, into stage
construction and glasshouses. By around 1845 laminated iron was
taking over as a more efficient and economic material than cast
iron, heralding a spectacular rejuvenation in the conception of
buildings. The central market building in Paris, Les Halles, was
erected in 1853 by Victor Baltard and Felix Callet. It was the
first building in France to openly display its metalwork. It opened
the way for the construction of new types of edifice required
by an industrialized society, such as railway stations, markets,
factories, large stores, glass-roofed buildings, pavilions and
exhibition halls. The use of iron in architecture spread widely,
and became one of the most original and spectacular forms of creative
expression of the nineteenth century, because of its lightness,
its transparency and the elegant way it rises into the air, coupled
with its brute strength, its restrained power and its extreme
tautness.
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Les Halles |