Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Le Havre, the City Rebuilt by Auguste Perret' has mentioned 'Town' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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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 | WIKI |
The commune of Le Havre consists of two areas separated by a natural cliff edge: one part in the lower part of the town to the south including the harbour, the city centre and the suburbs. | WIKI |
The upper town to the north, is part of the cauchois plateau: the neighbourhood of Dollemard is its highest point (between 90 to 115 metres (295 to 377 feet) above sea level). | WIKI |
The lower town is subject to a rising water table. | WIKI |
Comparison of local Meteorological data with other cities in France[22] Town Sunshine(hours/yr) Rain(mm/yr) Snow (days/yr) Storm(days/yr) Fog (days/yr) National Average 1,973 770 14 22 40 Le Havre[18] 1,786 709 11 13 53 Paris 1,661 637 12 18 10 Nice 2,724 767 1 29 1 Strasbourg 1,693 665 29 29 56 Brest 1,605 1,211 7 12 75 | WIKI |
M per inhabitant[30]): the two largest areas are the Montgeon Forest and Rouelles Park which are both located in the upper town. | WIKI |
For air transport, there is Le Havre Octeville Airport which is located 5xc2xa0km (3xc2xa0mi) north of Le Havre at the town of Octeville-sur-Mer and managed by CODAH. | WIKI |
This solves the problem of a break between the lower town and the upper town and the two parts of the city are connected by long boulevards, winding roads, many stairs, a funicular, and finally the Jenner tunnel. | WIKI |
[33] Since 1890 the funicular has provided a link between the upper town and the lower town in four minutes with a cable car. | WIKI |
The first part of the line connects the beach to the station climbing to the upper town through a new tunnel near the Jenner tunnel then it splits into two: one link going to Mont-Gaillard, the other to Caucriauville. | WIKI |
Plan of Le Havre and its town centre rebuilt after the Second World War | WIKI |
Upper town[edit] | WIKI |
The upper town is composed of three parts: the "coast", the suburban districts of the plateau, and large peripheral housing estates. | WIKI |
The Jenner tunnel passes under the "coast" and connects the upper town to the lower town. | WIKI |
The name of the town was attested in 1489, even before it was founded by Franxc3xa7ois I in the form le Hable de Grace then Ville de Grace in 1516, two years before its official founding. | WIKI |
Subsequently, the population drain of the First World War was offset by the annexation of the town of Graville (the city gained 27,215 people between 1911 and 1921). | WIKI |
The University Institutes of Technology of Le Havre occupies two main sites: one in the upper town in the Caucriauville-Rouelles district which was opened in 1967 and another in the Eure district since 2011. | WIKI |
[142] Presbyterian Reform Church (Eglise Rxc3xa9formxc3xa9e), 47 rue Anatole France, built in 1857, bombed in 1941, the roof and ceiling were rebuilt in 1953 by two architects from the famous Auguste Perret office: Jacques Lamy and Gxc3xa9rard Dupasquier, The only building in town offering both ancient and the new Perret school of architecture in the same building. | WIKI |
Le Havre is a board game about the development of the town of Le Havre. | WIKI |
The destroyed area was rebuilt between 1945 and 1964 according to the plan of a team of architects and town planners headed by Auguste Perret. | UNESCO |
Among the many reconstructed cities, Le Havre is exceptional for its unity and integrity, associating a reflection of the earlier pattern of the city and its extant historic structures with the new ideas of town planning and construction technology. | UNESCO |
Criterion (ii): The post-war reconstruction plan of Le Havre is an outstanding example and a landmark of the integration of urban planning traditions and a pioneer implementation of modern development in architecture, technology and town planning. | UNESCO |
These principles of integration of urban traditions and a pioneer implementation of modern developments in architecture, technology and town planning, have been fully respected and today remain perfectly visible. | UNESCO |