CentraleSupélec

CentraleSupélec
Type

Education - Research

Grand établissement Grande École
Established 1 January 2015
Budget € 100 million
President Hervé Biausser
Academic staff
852
Postgraduates

5,350

(1,000 Engineers/year)
Location Châtenay-Malabry, Gif-sur-Yvette, Metz, Rennes, France
Affiliations Université Paris-Saclay, TIME, CESAER
Website www.centralesupelec.fr

CentraleSupélec is a French institute of research and higher education in engineering sciences. It was established on 1 January 2015 as a result of a strategic merger between two leading grandes écoles of France - École Centrale Paris and Supélec.

It is a key founding member of the University of Paris-Saclay (consortium of research universities in France), the TIME (Top Industrial Managers for Europe) network and also the CESAER association of European engineering schools.

Châtenay-Malabry
Gif-sur-Yvette
Metz
Metz
Rennes
CentraleSupélec

History

École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures

École Centrale Paris was founded in 1829 on a private initiative by Alphonse Lavallée, who became its first president, and three scientist associates: Eugène Peclet, Jean-Baptiste Dumas, and Théodore Olivier. The founding vision was to educate multidisciplinary engineers for the emerging industrial sector. The institution was offered to the French state in 1857 by its creator, Alphonse Lavallée.

Initially located in the Hôtel de Juigné (now Hôtel Salé and home to the Musée Picasso), it was transferred to rue Montgolfier in 1884, where it stayed until 1969. Its current location neighbours the Parc de Sceaux.

École Supérieure d'Electricité

See also: Supélec

Supélec was founded in 1894 by Eleuthère Mascart, a prominent academic who was elected as a Perpetual Member and Secretary of the prestigious Académie des Sciences and Foreign Member of the British Royal Society. He was also a Professor at the Collège de France, and recipient of the Bordin Prize in 1866 as well as the Grand prix de l'Académie des sciences in 1874. Supélec was created in order to educate engineers for the then booming electrical industry.

Supélec was originally based in Rue de Staël, 15th district of Paris. It was then relocated to Malakoff close to Porte de Vanves and Gif-sur-Yvette in 1975, the latter in which the main campus is currently located. A second campus was established at Rennes in 1972 and a third at Metz in 1985.

CentraleSupélec Alliance

Since December 2008, a strategic alliance was announced between the two schools, known today through the common brand of CentraleSupélec. Hervé Biausser became the director in 2013, 1 September, while keeping the directorship of Centrale Paris. He realized the merger between these two schools. CentraleSupélec now has four campuses in France: Châtenay-Malabry, Gif-sur-Yvette, Metz and Rennes.

CentraleSupélec, a founding member of the Université Paris-Saclay

Since 2008, École Centrale Paris and Supélec participated in the creation of the campus of the Paris-Saclay research cluster. The University of Paris-Saclay is a French mega university under development, which aims to become the top university in continental Europe.

Rankings

École Centrale Paris is widely considered to be among the top 3 engineering schools of France.[1] Supélec is a reference in the field of electric energy and information sciences and ranks among the world's top institutes in electrical and computer engineering. According to several salary surveys, graduates from both schools are among the highest-paid graduates in France.[2]

Partnerships

CentraleSupélec has close ties with top universities around the world, such as Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University, California Institute of Technology, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, ETH Zurich, RWTH Aachen, TU Dresden , UC Berkeley, National University of Singapore, University of São Paulo and Tsinghua University.[3]

Coordinates: 48°42′36″N 2°09′48″E / 48.7100841°N 2.163283299999989°E / 48.7100841; 2.163283299999989

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.