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Pierre Patte (1723-1814)

Pierre Patte (1723–1814) was a French architect who was the assistant of the great French teacher of architecture, Jacques-François Blondel, whose Cours d´architecture which ran to nine volumes by 1777, he saw through the press after Blondel´s death in 1774.

He has been credited for having been the first to illustrate a city street plan with buildings and sewer system shown in a section view, a reference to a section he produced in 1769, though recent study has shown the irrefutable influence of a similar drawing produced by the Portuguese engineer Eugenio dos Santos in the aftermath of the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. Under the reign of Louis XV Patte theorized in the middle of the 18th century about thinking about the overall structure of the city as an urban organism where changing one aspect would affect the whole thing. A century later some of Patte´s ideas would help change Paris under the direction of Baron Haussmann.

Relationships with persons or entities via objects

(The left column lists the relations of this actor to objects in the right column. In the middle you find other actors in relation to the same objects.)

[Relation to person or institution] Pierre Patte (1723-1814)
[Relation to person or institution] Jules Hardouin-Mansart (1646-1708) ()
[Relation to person or institution] Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne (1711-1778) ()