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National School of Bridges and Roads in Paris

Patrimoine classé
École
Paris

National School of Bridges and Roads in Paris

    26-28 Rue des Saints-Pères
    75007 Paris

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1716
Establishment of the Bridges and Roads Corps
14 février 1747
Foundation of the Royal School of Bridges and Roads
1775
Turgot Regulation
1851
Decree opening to non-polytechnicians
1914–1918
Closure of World War I
1997
Moving to Champs-sur-Marne
juillet 2024
Integration at the Polytechnic Institute of Paris
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Daniel-Charles Trudaine - Founder Created school in 1747.
Jean-Rodolphe Perronet - First Director (1747–94) Father of the formation of engineers.
Henri Navier - Former student and teacher Pioneer of fluid mechanics.
Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis - Teacher and scientist Discoverer of Coriolis' strength.
Eugène Freyssinet - Former student Inventor of prestressed concrete.
Sadi Carnot - Former student President of the Republic (1887–94).
Élisabeth Borne - Former student Prime Minister (2022–2024).

Origin and history

The National School of Bridges and Roads (ENPC) was founded in 1747 by Daniel-Charles Trudaine as the Royal School of Bridges and Roads to train engineers of the eponymous corps. It was born in the context of the creation of the Corps des ponts et chaussées (1716), responsible for developing the national road network under Louis XV. Originally based in Paris, the school trains its first pupils by self-apprenticeship, supervised by Jean-Rodolphe Perronet, its first director (1747–94). The lessons relate to geometry, mechanics and hydraulics, supplemented by site visits and collaborations with scientists.

After the Revolution, the school temporarily became a national school and then an imperial school under Napoleon, before returning to its current name. In the 19th century, it adapted to industrialisation and the rise of transport (railways, canals), diversifying its teachings (electricity, economy, urban planning). Figures such as Henri Navier, Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis or Augustin Fresnel teach or study there, marking the history of science and civil engineering. A decree of 1851 opened the school to students not from Polytechnique, including foreigners and free listeners.

During the World Wars, the school played an active role: its premises welcomed military organizations in 1914–18, and its students illustrated in the Resistance in 1939–45. After 1945, it internationalises, develops research and multiplies partnerships (ParisTech, Institut Polytechnique de Paris). In 1997, she moved mostly to Champs-sur-Marne (Cité Descartes), while maintaining a Parisian settlement. Its heritage includes a historical library (Lesage fonds) and art collections (busts, paintings).

Today, ENPC trains general engineers, with courses in civil engineering, computer science, finance and management. She awarded degrees in engineering, master's degrees, master's degrees and MBA, in collaboration with institutions such as ParisTech or the Institut Polytechnique de Paris (since 2024). Its international network has 43% of double-diploma students abroad, and its former student association (Ponts Alumni) has more than 13,000 members.

His former students include renowned scientists (Henri Becquerel, Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903; Jean Tirole, Nobel Prize in Economics in 2014), iconic engineers (Eugène Freyssinet, inventor of prestressed concrete; Marc Mimram, architect) and political leaders (Sadi Carnot, President of the Republic; Elizabeth Borne, Prime Minister). The school remains a key player in the formation of French technical and administrative elites.

External links