Musée des arts et métiers--a maker's museum in Paris

lathed_projects_from_musee_des_arts_et_metiers.jpg

My colleague Julie Steele, editor of The Geek Atlas, suggested I check out the Musée des arts et métiers on my recent trip to Paris. It's a true Maker's museum; I really don't know where to begin. It's got so much stuff a maker could love:

There's a lot more (computers, engines, planes, it keeps going on and on). Check out the museum's web site and this Flickr set.

A brief excerpt from the Geek Atlas, 128 Places Where Science & Technology Come Alive, by John Graham-Cumming:

Britain and Germany may contest the title of best science museum with the London Science Museum and Munich Deutsches Museum (see Chapters 77 and 19, respectively), but France's Musée des Arts et Métiers (Museum of Arts and Trades) boasts of being the oldest (it was founded in 1794), and has a superb collection of devices dating from before 1750 to the present day.


The museum, situated in an 800-year-old priory, has a collection covering scientific instruments, materials, construction, communications, energy, mechanics, and transport.

The scientific instrument collection recounts the history of the creation of the metric system (with the meter, liter, and gram). The meter was to be one ten-millionth of the distance along the meridian from the North Pole to the Equator (running through Paris, of course), and when calculations were made in 1793 the meter was defined (with an error of 5 millimeters; see Chapter 8 for more on the meridian and meter). The gram was the weight of a cubic centimeter of water, and a liter was the volume of a cube with 10-centimeter sides.

Also in the scientific instrument collection is Foucault's device for measuring the speed of light. In 1862, Foucault measured the speed of light using simple apparatus to estimate the speed of light at 298,000 kps (he was off by less than 1%).


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Comments

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Posted by: Scott Lawrence on July 15, 2009 at 3:15 PM

We visited this museum when we went to Paris for our honeymoon. It was quite awesome.

http://www.umlautllama.com/g/main.php?g2_itemId=12169

that's the first pic in the series. :}


Posted by: Pat on July 15, 2009 at 4:50 PM

And in Florence

If you are in Florence, they have a fantastic Science Museum. Not big budget US style museum, more a geeky one with a whole lot of equipment from people who hung out in Florence doing science. Like Galileo. Just around the corner from the Uffizi.


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