Charles Benvignat
Charles Benvignat was a French architect, especially active in Lille, then undergoing major urban expansion.
Life
Benvignat moved to Lille as a young man. As a brilliant student in the architecture class at the Ecoles académiques, he was sent to the Beaux-Arts in Paris, where he studied as a painter as well as an architect. Returning to Lille, he was entrusted with several private projects and church restorations. In 1833 he was made the Ecoles académiques's professor of architecture and held the post for 30 years. From 1842 he was responsible for several major public works:- Expansion of the old théâtre Lequeux
- Restoration of the Vieille Bourse and restoration of its decor
- Column of the Goddess, a 2-stage project located in the Place du Général-de-Gaulle, Lille
- Sugar and wheat hall
- Palais Rihour, base of the mayor and museums
- Lycée making up the medicine school and sciences faculty
- Several churches, such as in the Moulins and Esquermes suburbs