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The exceptional dimensions of the Millau Viaduct, the aesthetic decisions of architect Norman Foster and, of course, the natural grandeur of the Aveyronnais landscape and the Gorges du Tarn which surround it, all come together and make the region even more attractive to tourists.
All of France’s great works of civil engineering, such as the bridges of Normandy and Tancarville, or the Marémotrice factory of the Rance, today make up a group of major destinations for individuals and groups of tourists. The visiting statistics at their welcome centres are proof of this.
The recent increase in technological tourism is undeniable, so much so that major industrial sites are now opening up to the general public.
The Millau Viaduct is far more than a simple work of civil engineering used by hurried travellers. Many people take the time to stop and look from a rest area upstream of the Millau tollhouse.
As with its prestigious ancestor, the Pont du Gard, or a more recent work such as the Garabit Viaduct (the founding work of the Eiffel company, an affiliate of the Eiffage group and active participant in the viaduct project), the Millau Viaduct has also become a major stop amongst France’s major technological and historic heritage sites. |