Louis Wenger
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Jean-Pierre-Louis Wenger (31 May 1809 in Lausanne – 11 August 1861 in La Vaux, commune of Aubonne) was a
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architect and politician from the canton of Vaud.


Biography

At the age of 15, Wenger started training in the workshop of architect of Lausanne. He subsequently stayed in Paris in 1827–30, where he attended courses at the '' École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts'' under the supervision of Achille Leclère. Upon his return to Switzerland, he started a political career and was a
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deputy in the Grand Council of Vaud which he chaired six times between 1846 and 1861. He was a member of the city council of Lausanne from 1842 to 1843 and from 1848 to 1854. Moreover, Wenger sat in the Council of States from 1848 to 1849, then in the National Council from 1851 to 1854 and again in the Council of States from 1855 until his death in 1861. He became a colonel of the
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. As an architect, Wenger restored several important monuments such as the Chapel of St. Anthony, La Sarraz, the Reformed Church of Our Lady, Orny, and the rose of the Cathedral of Lausanne. However, Wenger was mainly a building architect. He designed churches in Le Brassus and Chavannes-le-Veyron. He may have built the church of Bussigny, but archive sources rather attribute this work to surveyor Samuel Cupelin and architect David Braillard. Wenger also designed buildings for the Army and justice such as the first barracks of Bière and the women's prison in Lausanne. His works on healthcare buildings include the ''Asile des aveugles'' (Asylum for the blind) and the uncompleted project of a psychiatric hospital. Moreover, Wenger designed schools in Assens, Renens,
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and Saint-Saphorin. His public buildings include the Arlaud Museum in Lausanne, the clock towers of Aubonne and Lutry, the bell tower of the temple of Prangins, the city hall and communal inn of
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, the former customs station of Lausanne and the communal inn of Gimel. Wenger was known for his Neoclassical architecture with eclectic elements.


References


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External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Wenger, Louis 19th-century Swiss architects Neoclassical architects 19th-century Swiss politicians Free Democratic Party of Switzerland politicians Members of the National Council (Switzerland) Members of the Council of States (Switzerland) People from Lausanne 1809 births 1861 deaths