European Inventor Hall of Fame opens at Deutsches Museum
17 October 2013
EPO President Benoît Battistelli and Deutsches Museum General Director Wolfgang M. Heckl open the exhibition
Seven outstanding scientists and engineers from
across Europe were thrust into the public spotlight at the opening of the European
Inventor Hall of Fame today at the Deutsches
Museum in Munich. The exhibition, commissioned by the
EPO as part of celebrations to mark the 40th anniversary of the signing of the
European Patent Convention in 1973, was officially opened by EPO President Benoît Battistelli and the Museum's General Director
Wolfgang M. Heckl.
"Looking at the exhibition, no one can fail to be impressed by the vision and energy of these pioneering creators," said Mr Battistelli. "What we see here is technology at the service of humanity, helping not only to boost economic growth and create jobs, but to make the world a better place, with an improved quality of life."
Professor Heckl spoke about the "technology triangle" formed by the German Patent and Trademark Office, the European Patent Office and the Deutsches Museum. "Together we form a nucleus of all that is brave and bold in technological progress," he said.
Former President Alain Pompidou and current President Benoît Battistelli test the exhibit
The Hall of Fame features seven exhibits about inspirational men and
women, all of whom have been honoured in recent years with the European
Inventor Award for their groundbreaking inventions. The exhibition itself is
the result of co‑operation between the EPO and a group of European science and
technology museums, including the Deutsches
Museum, whichstands facing EPO headquarters on the banks of the river
Isar in Munich ─ the inventions of the past and present
juxtaposed with the inventions of the future. The exhibition opens in Munich, but will
then travel to some of Europe's other leading
science and technology museums in the months to come. Its first port of call is
the Centro
Musei Scienze Naturali in Naples, where it can be seen from March to May 2014.
The inventors featured in the Hall of Fame are:
Prof. Josef Bille (Germany), pioneer of laser eye correction (winner 2012, Lifetime
Achievement);
Prof. Jason Chin (UK), who together with Oliver Rackham (Australia)
has re-engineered protein synthesis inside human cells for advanced
therapeutics (finalists 2012, Research);
Dr. Jaap Haartsen (the Netherlands), inventor of Bluetooth short-range wireless
connectivity (finalist 2012, Industry);
Ann Lambrechts (Belgium), inventor of steel fibres to reinforce concrete
(winner 2011, Industry);
Farouk Tedjar (France), inventor of a safe, green way to recycle batteries
(finalist 2012, SMEs);
Jan Tøpholm (Denmark), together with Søren Westermann and Svend
Vitting Andersen, whose patented process is behind 95% of all tailor-made
hearing aids (winners 2012, Industry);
Benedetto Vigna (Italy), whose three-dimensional motion sensor is found
in smart phones and the Nintendo® WiiTM (finalist 2010, Industry).
Launched in 2006, the
European Inventor Award is presented annually by the European Patent Office, to
honour inventive individuals and teams whose pioneering work provides answers
to the challenges of our age and thereby contributes to social progress,
economic growth and prosperity. It is presented in five categories: Industry,
Research, Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs), Non-European Countries,
and Lifetime Achievement.
The Deutsches Museum is
the world's largest museum of science and technology, with
approximately 1.5 million visitors per year and about 28 000 exhibits
objects from 50 different technical fields. It was founded in 1903 at a
meeting of the Association of German Engineers.