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Supélec

Supélec
École Supérieure d'Électricité
Supelec logo.svg
Motto Une grande école d'ingénieurs au cœur des sciences de l'information, de l'énergie et des systèmes
Motto in English
A "grande école" of engineering in the forefront of Energy and Information Science
Type Private French Grande École
Established 1894
President Hervé Biausser
Postgraduates 1,975
(1,549 engineer candidates)
250
Location Gif-sur-Yvette, Rennes, Metz, France
48°42′31″N 2°09′50″E / 48.708677°N 2.163996°E / 48.708677; 2.163996Coordinates: 48°42′31″N 2°09′50″E / 48.708677°N 2.163996°E / 48.708677; 2.163996
Affiliations UniverSud Paris, Elles Bougent, CESAER
Website Official website in English

École Supérieure d'Électricité, commonly known as Supélec (French pronunciation: ​[sypelɛk]), was a French graduate school of engineering. It was the top grande école in France in the field of electrical engineering and information sciences.

Founded in 1894 and initially located in the 15th district of Paris, it was moved to Gif-sur-Yvette in 1975. Since then, two more campuses have been established, in Rennes in 1972 and Metz in 1985. It is a member of Top Industrial Managers for Europe (TIME) network. It is also a member of the CESAER Association and n+i Engineering Studies.

In 2015, Supélec merged with École Centrale Paris and became CentraleSupélec. CentraleSupélec is a member of Université Paris-Saclay.

Supélec was founded in 1894 by Eleuthère Mascart. He was elected: Perpetual Member and Secretary of the Académie des Sciences and Foreign Member of the British Royal Society, Professor at the Collège de France, and won the Bordin Prize in 1866 and the Grand prix de l'Académie des sciences in 1874.

From 2004 to 2013, the director of Supélec was Alain Bravo. Hervé Biausser became the director in 1 September 2013, while keeping the directorship of Centrale Paris.

Historically the goal of Supélec was to educate engineers for the then booming electrical industry.

Supélec was originally based in Rue de Staël, 15th district of Paris. Then it moved to Malakoff, close to Porte de Vanves and to Gif-sur-Yvette in 1975 where the main campus is currently located. A second campus was established in Rennes in 1972 and a third one in Metz in 1985.


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