Barbier, Benard, et Turenne

Barbier, Benard, et Turenne (BBT) is a French company founded in 1862 , specializing in the manufacture of spotlights, Fresnel lenses for lighthouses, and lighting systems.[1] It was world's leading producer of lighthouse beacons at the end of the 19th Centry. It dissolved in 1982.[2]

History

The company was founded in 1862 by Frederic Barbier and Stanislas Fenestre as Barbier and Fenestre. It was renamed Barbier et Cie in 1887 and Barbier and Bénard in 1889. It became Barbier, Benard, et Turenne early in the 20th Century, and became a public limited company in 1919.[3][4]

Production

Lighthouses

Barbier, Benard, et Turenne began with a specialty in the production of equipment for lighthouse beacons, such as Fresnel lenses.[3] It later expanded into production of beacons themselves, as well as rotation mechanisms.[3] Eventually, the company manufactured buoys, metal towers, and fog sirens.[3]

BBT was soon be able to build complete lighthouses, and became world-renowned for it.[5] It was the world leader in the construction of lighthouses in the late 19th Century.[3]

BBT used its expertise in optics, lighting, and construction to expand into other businesses, including stadium and airport floodlights and streetlamps.[3] It also license-produced microscopes.[3]

Locations

BBT's factories are located mainly near the Ourcq Canal in Paris.[5] Its headquarters is also in Paris. It has facilitiesin Nazelles (Indre-et-Loire) and White Misseron (Nord).[3] BBT has specialist plants for the production of gas for streetlamps, at Sfax and Marseilles.[3][6]

Dissolution

BBT was dissolved in 1982.[3]

Notes

  1. Barbier Benard Turenne; BBT finances;BBT finances
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 École des Ponts ParisTech, enpc.fr website, {pdf} /web-BBT.pdf "Barbier Benard Turenne (BBT), historical note".
  3. Thobie, Jacques. Administration General beacons of the Ottoman Empire and the Collas and Michel society, 1860-1960 (L'Harmattan, 2004), p. 12.
  4. 1 2 Le Cunff, Louis. Sea Lights (Navy Anchor Press, 1992), p. 75
  5. Website of the Ministry of Culture headlights / phares_gaz.htm "Major coastal lighthouses of France, technical and scientific objects and materials: gas systems"
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