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Georges-Eugène Haussmann

12 bytes added, 16:03, April 25, 2015
'''Georges-Eugène Haussmann''' (Paris 1809 – Paris 1891) was a [[French]] civic planner whose name is associated with the rebuilding of [[Paris]]. He was hired by [[Napoleon III]] in 1852 to "modernize" the city.
[[Image:Paris.jpg|right|Paris (Etoile)]]
Haussmann created expansive gardens (Montsouris, Luxembourg), a network of broad avenues, and renovated ''Place de l'Etoile'', ''Place Léon-Blum'', ''Place de la République'', ''Place de l'Alma'', the ''Arc de Triomphe'', and the ''Grand Opera House''(1861-1875), as well as undertaked important water works, city facilities and public monuments. Also, Haussmann had the ''Gare de Lyon'' constructed in 1855, the ''Gare du Nord'' in 1865 and the construction of 600 kilometers of aqueduct (1878).
Additionally, Haussmann improved rail transportation, a better lighting and water sanitation.