Charles-Auguste Questel
Charles-Auguste Questel (19 September 1807 – 30 January 1888) was a French academic architect and teacher.
Biography
Born in Paris, Questel was a student of Félix Duban at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, and took a second-place Prix de Rome in 1844. He became a member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts in 1871.
Questel became the patron of his own atelier at the Ecole. Among his students were Henri Paul Nénot, Ernest Sanson, James Freret, Eugène Train and the Swiss architect Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli; he was the father-in-law of French architect Honoré Daumet.
Questel died in Paris. Upon his death the atelier was taken over by Jean-Louis Pascal.
Works
His architectural work includes:
- the church of Saint-Paul in Nîmes built from 1835 through 1849
- restoration of the Roman aqueduct Pont du Gard, Vers-Pont-du-Gard, southern France, 1841-1846
- the Pradier Fountain, Nîmes, 1851
- the Saint Anne Hospital in Paris, 1867
- Préfecture de l'Isère, Grenoble, 1861-1866
- the Library and Museum of Grenoble, 1872
Sources
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