Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Le Havre, the City Rebuilt by Auguste Perret' has mentioned 'Culture' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Geography 1.1 Location 1.2 Geology and terrain 1.3 Climate 1.4 Environment 2 Transport 2.1 Urban transport 3 Layout 3.1 Lower city 3.1.1 City rebuilt after 1945 3.1.2 Neighbourhoods 3.1.3 Southern districts 3.2 Upper town 4 History 4.1 Toponymy 4.2 Heraldry 5 Politics and administration 5.1 Political trends and results 5.2 Municipal administration 5.3 Mayors 5.4 Public institutions and services 5.5 National politics 6 Twin towns xe2x80x93 sister cities 7 Demographics 8 Education 8.1 Schools 8.2 Special schools and higher education 9 Sports 9.1 Facilities 9.2 Events 10 Media 10.1 Religion 11 Economy 11.1 General 11.2 Port 11.3 Industry 11.4 Services sector 12 Culture 12.1 Events and festivals 12.2 Cultural heritage and architecture 12.3 Churches 12.4 Museums 12.5 Theatres, auditoriums and concerts 12.6 Libraries and archives 12.7 Representations in visual arts 12.8 Cinema 12.9 Literature 12.10 Music 12.11 Board game 12.12 Norman language 13 People 14 See also 15 References 15.1 Footnotes 16 Further reading 17 External links
Another notable architectural work of the central city is that of the House of Culture built in 1982 by the Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer and nicknamed "the Volcano" because of the shape of the building.
Culture[edit]
The Museum at the Priory of Graville displays many items of religious art including statues, madonnas, and other religious objects many of which are classified by the Ministry of Culture.
Moreover, since 2008, the association I Love LH was started and promotes Le Havre culture and especially its music scene by organizing original cultural events as well as the free distribution of compilation music by local artists.
It integrates the xc3xaele Saint-Franxc3xa7ois (rebuilt at the same time by regional architects, not part of the Perret team), fragments of ancient urban fabric and isolated buildings spared from destruction (around which the grid of the city is reconstructed) and buildings constructed after 1964, the presence of which appears indissociable to the rebuilt fabric (notably the Maison de la Culture, the Rxc3xa9sidence de France, the extension of the Town Hall).