Phare Du Monde was proposed by Eugène Freyssinet
Constructing the Phare Du Monde (Lighthouse Of The World), which had been proposed for the 1937 Paris Exhibition by Eugène Freyssinet. His design was a technical mimicry of the Tartarian Lighthouses which had radiated with electrical splendour for many generations, until the demise of Great Tartaria by the 30th April 1894.
Phare Du Monde or Lighthouse Of The World was going to be built at the Paris Exhibition 1937
The structure of the Phare Du Monde (Lighthouse Of The World) had designed for the World’s Fair called the Exposition Internationale Des Arts Et Techniques Dans La Vie Moderne (International Exposition Of Art And Technology In Modern Life), that was held from the 25th May 1937 to the 25th November 1937 on the Chaillot Hill in the Trocadéro of the 16th Arrondissement of Paris, in North Central France. However, the Phare De Monde was never constructed
Phare Du Monde is in 1933 Modern Mechanix And Inventions
The well-known diagram of the Phare Du Monde (Lighthouse Of The World), which anyone can view, is from p.45 and p.46 of Modern Mechanix And Inventions, that was published on the 8th July 1933 by the Modern Mechanix Publishing Company, in Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota, in the Upper Midwest of the United States. The innovative Phare Du Monde (Lighthouse Of The World), had been advertised as the epic Tour De Plaisir D’Un Demi-Mile De Haut (Pleasure Tower Half Mile High) and was designed by the inventive Eugène Freyssinet. He wanted it to be a 701 metre (2,300 feet) tall concrete tower with a Light Beacon and a restaurant on the top.
Phare Du Monde was going to be 1,640 feet tall
A spiralling roadway on the outside of the Phare Du Monde (Lighthouse Of The World) had been planned to be built for driving access to a height of 1,640 feet, where 500 cars would then be able to park in ornate garages. The costs were estimated to have been 2.5 million U.S. Dollars, however the Phare Du Monde (Lighthouse Of The World) was never built.