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La Piscine Museum La Piscine (French for "the swimming pool") is a museum of art and industry,

La Piscine Museum    La Piscine (French for "the swimming pool") is a museum of art and industry, Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Barrey / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

EB5TD6

File size:

34.4 MB (1.2 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?

Dimensions:

4240 x 2832 px | 35.9 x 24 cm | 14.1 x 9.4 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

2011

Location:

Museum of La Piscine , Roublaix, Lille, France

More information:

Various views within the Museun of La Piscine is a museum of art and industry, located in the city of Roubaix in northern France. , but its common name derives from the fact that it is housed in a former indoor swimming pool, with a notable art deco interior. La Piscine Museum Museum entrance La Piscine (French for "the swimming pool") is a museum of art and industry, located in the city of Roubaix in northernFrance. It is more formally known asLa Piscine-Musée d'Art et d'Industrie André Diligent or Le musée d'Art et d'Industrie de la ville de Roubaix, but its common name derives from the fact that it is housed in a former indoor swimming pool, with a notable art deco interior. History of the museum The swimming pool was constructed between 1927 and 1932 by the Lillearchitect Albert Baert. It closed as a swimming pool in 1985, and was remodelled as a museum by the architect Jean-Paul Philippon, opening in 2000. A modern entrance building, special exhibition space and garden were constructed within the roof-less shell of an adjoining textile factory.[1][2] The museum's permanent collection has its origins in 1835, when a collection of fabric samples from the many local textile factories was started. By 1898 the collection was housed in the National High School of Arts and Textile Industry(ENSAIT), and was seen as a way of cultivating the tastes of the town's workers, foremen and manufacturers. To this end the collection combined elements of literature, fine-arts, science and industrial products. The ENSAIT museum closed with the onset of World War II, and never reopened. From 1990 the collections were displayed in Roubaix's town hall, in preparation for the opening of La Piscine in 2000.[2]