Le quai Saint-Bernard est une voie située le long de la Seine, à Paris, dans le 5e arrondissement.
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The Musée de la Sculpture en Plein Air is a collection of outdoor sculpture located on the banks of the Seine in the 5th arrondissement, Paris, France. The museum opens free of charge.
The museum was created in 1980 in the Jardin Tino Rossi to display sculptures from the second half of the twentieth century. It stretches some 600 meters along the Quai Saint-Bernard beside the Jardin des Plantes, between Place Valhubert and Gare d'Austerlitz to just east of Pont de Sully. The museum currently contains over fifty sculptures, including pieces by Alexander Archipenko, Jean Arp, César Baldaccini, and Constantin Brâncuși, as well as the following pieces:
Augustin Cardenas, La Grande Fenêtre, 1974
Marta Colvin, Le Grand Signe, 1970
Guy de Rougemont, Interpénétration des deux espaces, 1975
Reinhoud d'Haese, Melmoth, 1966
Marino di Teana, Structure architecturale, 1973
Étienne-Martin, Demeurre 1, 1954–1958
Sorel Etrog, Fiesole, 1965–1967
Albert Feraud, Sans titre, 1979
Yoshikuni Iida, Shining Wings, 1981
Jean-Robert Ipoustéguy, Hydrophage, 1975
Micha Laury, Mind Accumulation, 1988
Aglaé Libéraki, Abellio, 1971–1973
Liuba, Animal 82, 1982
Liuba, Stèle, 1977
Bernard Pagès, Sans titre, 1988
Marta Pan, Sculpture, 1969
Ruggero Pazzi, Sculpture, 1979
Antoine Poncet, Ochicagogo, 1979
Nicolas Schöffer, Chronos 10, 1978
François Stahly, Neptune II, 1969
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The Sorbonne University Polytechnic School, or commonly Polytech Sorbonne, a French engineering grande école in Paris, France, created in 1983.
The school trains engineers in high sectors : Agribusiness, Electronics and Computers, Applied Mathematics and Computers, Materials, Robotics, Earth sciences, Mechanical engineering.
Located in the city of Paris, Polytech Sorbonne is a public higher education institution. The school is part of the Sorbonne University and is located on the university's Jussieu campus.
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The Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris is a French governmental, non-profit research and higher education establishment located in Paris, dedicated to the study of earth and planetary sciences by combining observations, laboratory analysis and construction of conceptual analogical and numerical models.
IPGP is part of CNRS and University Paris-Diderot. It is the second largest CNRS research unit in France. The institute has 14 research divisions and 6 observatories. IPGP is also in charge by the French government of monitoring the active volcanoes on French territories in addition to the management of the worldwide network of seismological stations GEOSCOPE, and a major contribution to the worldwide network of magnetic observatories Intermagnet. IPGP maintains permanent volcanologic observatories on the islands of Réunion, Guadeloupe, and Martinique. The institute also maintains several analytical facilities in applied geophysics as well as a park of a variety of geophysical instruments.
IPGP maintains three campuses in the Paris area. Until 2010, its main headquarters location is inside the Jussieu Campus in the 5th arrondissement of Paris. After 2010, it moved into a state of the art dedicated facility adjacent to the Jussieu Campus, in front of the Jardin des Plantes. IPGP has a second campus located in Paris-Diderot University in the 13th arrondissement of Paris where the geodesy and space sciences research, and undergrad teaching are done. The third campus is located 6 km to the east of Paris where it conducts space and planetary science activities ranging from building geophysical space instruments and sensors to planetary data analysis. IPGP maintain a staff of nearly 500 persons.
The lead investigator for the seismometer instrument on the international space mission to Mars, InSight is from this institute. Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure is a seismometer intended to operate on the surface of the planet Mars, hopefully increasing understanding of that planet and in turn the Solar System and Earth interiors.
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The Ménagerie du Jardin des Plantes is a zoo in Paris, France, belonging to the botanical garden Jardin des Plantes. Founded in 1794, largely with animals brought from the royal zoo of the Palace of Versailles, abandoned because of the French Revolution, it is the second oldest zoological garden in the world. Today, the zoo contains many rare smaller and medium-sized mammals, and a variety of birds and reptiles.
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The Île Louviers is a former island in the Seine in the centre of Paris, just upstream of the present Île Saint-Louis and of a similar size. Never built up, it was connected with the north bank of the river in 1843. Just before it ceased to be an island it had a surface area of 33,638m². In modern Paris the former island lies between the quai Henri IV and the boulevard Morland.