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Eiffel Tower HistoryJumat, 11 Mei 2012 08.39
The Eiffel Tower was
built for the International Exhibition of Paris of 1889commemorating the centenary of the French Revolution. The
Prince of Wales, later King Edward
VII of England, opened the tower. Of the 700 proposals submitted in
a design competition, Gustave Eiffel's was unanimously chosen.
However it was not accepted by all at first, and a petition of 300 names -
including those of Maupassant, Emile Zola, Charles Garnier (architect of the
Opéra Garnier), and Dumas the Younger - protested its construction. At 300 meters (320.75 m including
antenna), and 7,000 tons, it was the world's tallest building until 1930. Other statistics include:
1.
2.5 million rivets
2.
300 steel workers, and 2 years (1887-1889) to construct it.
3.
Sway of at most 12 cm in high winds.
4.
Height varies up to 15 cm depending on temperature.
5.
15,000 iron pieces (excluding rivets). 40 tons of paint. 1652 steps to the
top.
In 1889, Gustave
Eiffel began to fit the peak of the tower as an observation station to
measure the speed of wind. He also encouraged several scientific experiments
including Foucault's giant pendulum, a mercury barometer and the
first experiment of radio transmission. In1898, Eugene Ducretet at the Pantheon, received signals from the
tower.
After Gustave Eiffel experiments in
the field of meterology, he begun to look at the effects of wind and air
resistance, the science that would later be termed aerodynamics, which has
become a large part of both military and commercial aviation as well as rocket
technology. Gustave Eiffel imagined an automatic device
sliding along a cable that was stretched between the ground and the second
floor of the Eiffel Tower.
The tower was almost torn down in 1909, but was saved because of its
antenna used both for military and other purposes, and the city let it stand
after the permit expired. When the tower played an important role in capturing
the infamous spy Mata Hari during World War I, it gained such importance
to the French people that there was no more thought of demolishing it.- used
for telegraphy at that time.
From 1910 and
on the Eiffel Tower became part of the International Time Service. French radio
(since 1918), and French
television (since 1957)
have also made use of its stature.
During its lifetime, the Eiffel
Tower has also witnessed a few strange scenes, including being
scaled by a mountaineer in1954,
and parachuted off of in 1984 by
two Englishmen. In1923 a
journalist rode a bicycle down from the first level. Some accounts say he rode
down the stairs, other accounts suggest the exterior of one of the tower's four
legs which slope outward.
Of the 7.5
million kilowatt hours of electricity used annually, 580 thousand
are used exclusively to illuminate the tower. The tower's annual operation also
requires the use of 2 tons of paper for tickets, 4 tons of rag or paper wipes,
10,000 applications of detergents, 400 liters of metal cleansers and 25,000
garbage bags.
On the four facades of the tower, the 72 surnames of
leading turn-of-the-century French scientists and engineers are
engraved in recognition of their contributions to science. This engraving was
over painted at the beginning of the 20th century and restored in1986-1987 by the Société Nouvelle
d' Exploitation de la Tour Eiffel, a company contracted to operate business
related to the Tower.
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