Juste Lisch
Jean Juste Gustave Lisch (10 June 1828 – 24 August 1910) was a French architect.[1][2]
A native of Alençon, Lisch studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and was pupil of Léon Vaudoyer and Henri Labrouste. His architectural career was geared towards civic work: stations, public buildings, churches, and restoration of monuments.[1][2]
Juste retired in 1901 and died in Paris in 1910. He is buried in the Rouen monumental cemetery.[1][2]
Selected works
- renovation of the oratory at Germigny-des-Prés, 1867–1876
- Gare du Champ de Mars, 1878
- Gare Saint-Lazare, with the attached Hôtel Terminus, Paris, 1885–87
- Gare de Le Havre, 1888
- Gare de Javel, Paris, 1889
- Gare de l'Avenue Foch, Paris, 1900
- Invalides Station, Paris, 1900
- La Rochelle town hall
- Lyon Magistrates' court
- Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire church
- Ferrières, Manche church
- Notre-Dame-de-Cléry church
- ends Château de Pierrefonds renovation's.
gollark: Yes, revise literally constantly or you WILL fail.
gollark: it doesn't tell you anything about what their limits might be, which patterns each thing is better at, etc.
gollark: It's not a very useful comparison, is all.
gollark: In the vague sense of "it matches patterns in things", certainly.
gollark: If I felt like investing far too much time in this, I could probably implement something like AlphaZero, which I think has a neural network act as a heuristic for tree search.
References
- Juste Lisch. Musée d'Orsay
- Juste Lisch. structurae
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