You can helpexpand this article with text translated fromthe corresponding article in French. (December 2008)Click [show] for important translation instructions.
View a machine-translated version of the French article.
Machine translation, likeDeepL orGoogle Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
Youmust providecopyright attribution in theedit summary accompanying your translation by providing aninterlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary isContent in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:Saint-Genis-Pouilly]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template{{Translated|fr|Saint-Genis-Pouilly}} to thetalk page.
It is located in thePays de Gex, at the foot of theJura Mountains. Bordering theSwiss frontier, it is part of the cross-border area ofGeneva.With a population of almost 14,000 inhabitants (2019), it is the fifth most populous commune in the department of Ain.[3]
A large portion ofCERN, the European laboratory forparticle physics, is located within the territory of Saint-Genis-Pouilly; theALICE experiment is located on the periphery of the town, and the French entrance to the primary CERN campus (Meyrin) and theATLAS experiment are located only 3 km from the centre of St Genis. CERN is the world's largest fundamental physics research laboratory and its presence has largely been responsible for the development of the community of Saint Genis since the middle of the 1960s.
Saint-Genis-Pouilly is composed of two market towns (Saint-Genis and Pouilly) and two hamlets (Pregnin and Flies).The two market towns have both continued to expand and now practically merge into one, however the two hamlets still remain separate from each other and from the two towns.The elevation of the commune varies from 419 m (at the extreme south of the commune, to the confluence of the rivers Allondon and Nant de l'Ecra) to 502 m (at the extreme north of the commune, in the village of Flies).The commune is situated at the limit between the plains surrounding Geneva and the first foothills of the Jura.As indicated on the map opposite, the communes surrounding Saint-Genis-Pouilly are:Thoiry,Sergy,Crozet,Chevry,Prévessin-Moëns andSatigny (Swiss).
Many water courses traverse or border Saint-Genis-Pouilly: Lion,Allondon, Nant de l'Ecra, Bief de la Janvoin, Ouaf, Grand Journans and Petit Journans.In 2005 and 2006, these water courses were subject to a ban on water extraction as a result of the drought. In 2004, only the Allondon and the Lion would have been restricted.[4]The depth of the Allondon is measured at Saint-Genis-Pouilly by a network HYDRO station which transmits these readings by telephone.[5]
The meteorological station situated atGeneva International Airport, Cointrin, furnishes measurements of the weather relevant to Saint-Genis-Pouilly.This station is situated only 6.5 km from the centre of the commune and at a similar elevation (420 m).[6]Data from this station is available in real time fromMétéoSuisse.
Saint-Genis-Pouilly, like the whole of the Pays de Gex and the Canton of Geneva, knows the touch of theJoran, the cold wind which descends towardsLac Léman from the high Jura, where it sometimes provokes a storm.
According to a study[7] made in 2002, commissioned by the Department of Agriculture and the Forests of Ain, Saint-Genis-Pouilly is classed in a zone at risk from flooding. According to another official publication,[8]the commune is classed in a zone at risk from torrential downpours and rapid flooding.However, according to the list of major risks[9]to Saint-Genis-Pouilly published on the portal of the website of the Ministry of Ecology, "Prevention of major risks", the commune is classed in a zone at risk from overcrowding from man's activities.These three different qualifications of risk cannot be explained.
Along with the other communes in the canton of Gex, Saint-Genis-Pouilly is classed in seismic zone Ib, which is to say that the seismic risk is low.[10]A new classification is being prepared by the Ministry of Ecology,[11]but it does not seem that this will significantly change the classification of the communes in the Pays de Gex.
That part of the Allondon valley which is found within the territory of the commune constitutes a natural zone with interesting ecology, fauna and flora(ZNIEFF type I).[12]
The commune is sparsely wooded: the area occupied by forests is 7%.[13]
It was in 1887 that the current name, Saint-Genis-Pouilly, first appeared on the State civil registers. Previously, Saint-Genis-Pouilly was called Pouilly-Saint-Genis. Before that, the two towns were separately identified. Historically the spelling Saint-Genix had been widely used.
In his historical Atlas, G. Debombourg placedPulliacum in the epoque of the second reign of the Bourgogne (879-1032) and he placed the church of Pouilly-St-Genis on the religious maps.[14]In these "Preuves" he cites a text of 993 which mentionsPulliacum.[15]
A diary of 1698 mentions a certain Balthazard as a noble ofPrengin, in the Pays de Gex (perhaps this is the name given during this epoque to the current hamlet ofPregnin). Between 1601 and 1789 mention is made of the Baronnie ofSaint-Genist.[16]
Names of the area with a Gallo-Romanic origin, Polliacum, Pulliacum, derived, with the suffix -acum from the root name Paulius or Pollius.[17]
Towards the end of this time, Saint Genis took on a greater importance. Its takeover of the Postes Royales (next to the current chapel) kickstarted the growth of the town and Pouilly-Saint-Genix soon became Saint-Genis-Pouilly.
Pregnin figures in the Procès-verbaux du Directoire.[18]The name of Saint-Genis, as in the case ofSaint-Genis-Laval, probably comes fromSaint Genest, a Roman comedian from the second half of the 3rd century, martyred underDiocletian.[19]
The Roman colonyColonia Iulia Equestris founded byJulius Caesar between 50 and 45 BC extended as far as Thoiry and included the territory which was to become Saint-Genis-Pouilly.
The villa of Pouilly had been occupied by a rich family, as evidenced by the jewelry found there.[20]: 35
The place calledles châtelets, situated to the north ofPregnin took its name, without doubt, from the presence in the 2nd century of a small fort situated on the Roman road running along the Jura.[20]: 29
Cassini's map of 18th century Geneva, based on measurements taken by Calon de Felcourt between 1759 and 1761, shows the town of Pouilly and the hamlets ofPregnin and Flies. A windmill on the site of St Genis can also be identified.The road from Lyon to Geneva and the fork towards Gex are also clearly visible. These roads, easily identifiable by the route they trace through the Pays de Gex, still exist today.
It was the extension within France ofCERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) in the middle of the 1960s which made Saint-Genis-Pouilly the little town ("coquette")[26] that it is today.It is also thanks to the presence of CERN that the local economy has undergone considerable growth and diversification.
Until recently, the commune used an azure coat of arms with three gold towers. Today, the commune uses exclusively a modern logo which figures prominently on the pages of its website and in its publications.
One of the consequences of this rapid expansion of the population (along with those of the neighbouring communes in France and Switzerland) is the rapid increase in house prices.For example, the price per square metre of an apartment in the Pays de Gex increased by 59% between 2000 and 2004, according to INSEE.[29]
In addition to CERN, the proximity of Switzerland and the international organisations headquartered in Geneva explains why a significant proportion of the population of the commune are foreigners.According to the census taken by INSEE in 2017, the commune contained amongst its 12,544 inhabitants 4,418 foreigners[30] (making 35.2%).By way of comparison, the département of Ain contains, also in 2017, amongst its 643,350 inhabitants 56,160 foreigners[31] (making 8.7%).
As of 2017[update], most housing in Saint-Genis-Pouilly is in apartment blocks (70.9%) and individual houses (27.5%).[32] The apartment blocks are concentrated in the town of Saint-Genis. The commune has a significantly larger proportion of apartments than the other communes in the department: 35.5% of dwellings in Ain are apartments.[33]
The majority of the population in the Pays de Gex, Ain, the Rhône-Alpes region, and mainland France areowner-occupiers of their homes. In Saint-Genis-Pouilly, by contrast, the majority of the population live in rented accommodation (only 46.3% of individual residences are owner-occupied).[32] Within the Pays de Gex, only Ferney-Voltaire has a lower proportion of owner occupiers (39.1%).[34] It is possible that this peculiarity is explained by the large number of employees living in the two communities who work for international organisations.
The commune is presently administered by M. H. Bertrand and his team. The results of the second round of the municipal elections on 18 March 2001 was as follows:
Party
Head of party
Votes
%
Seats
Un avenir pour tous
H. Bertrand
859
48,67
22
En avant
M. Hayotte
689
39,04
6
Unis pour réussir
M. Mugnier
217
12,29
1
In total, from the 3,023 registered electors, there were 1,807 votes cast and 1,765 votes counted.[35]
The commune expended in 2005 a total revenue spend of €6.64 million and a total capital investment of €4.06 million, however these figures have increased to €7.96 million (revenue) and €3.69 million (capital). It has therefore reached an overall positive result of €0.96 million this year.At 31 December 2005, Saint-Genis-Pouilly was indebted to the amount of only € 2.12 million, being €288 per inhabitant (the communes of between 5,000 and 10,000 inhabitants — (la strate) — had an average debt of €935 per inhabitant).Whereas the receipts from the "taxe professionnelle" have been weak: €0.53 million (equivalent to €72 per inhabitant against the average of the (strate) of €211 per inhabitant).
Rate of Taxe d'habitation in effect within the Pays de Gex in 2006 (Saint-Genis-Pouilly in red)
For several years the rate of the Taxe d'habititation (local council tax) has been fixed at 7.78%. As indicated on the chart opposite this rate was, in 2006, approximately equal to the average for the Pays de Gex: 7.69%.[36]
For the referendum on theTreaty establishing a constitution for Europe, on 29 May 2005, 1,865 of the 3,089 electors who voted and the 1,838 (suffrages) expressed on this occasion which were reported in the following manner: 1,087 Yes (59.14%) and751 No (40.86%).
For the referendum on theTreaty of Maastricht, on 20 September 1992, 1,814 of the2,576 electors who voted and the 1,774 (suffrages) expressed on this occasion which were reported in the following manner: 1,186 Yes (66.85%) and588 No (33.15%).
The inhabitants of Saint-Genis-Pouilly are therefore more europhile than the rest of the French population who rejected theTreaty establishing a constitution for Europe, and approved by only a slim majority (51.04%) theTreaty of Maastricht.
Note: Unless indicated otherwise, the results presented above are taken from theMinistry of the Interior.
The church of Saint Pierre at Pouilly (porch and choir from the 13th century) is without doubt the most well known element of religious architecture in the commune. The church is Roman, except for the choir which is Gothic.
Some ruins from the small fortified château (from 13th century) are still visible in Flies.Gallo-Roman sepulchres and others from the 6th-8th centuries can still be found in the cemetery surrounding the church at Pouilly.
CERN brings to the community an opening on to the world of physics which is perhaps unique in the world. Conferences are very frequently organised and some of these are open to the public. It is possible to visit the exhibition centre at CERN and also, with a prior appointment, to make a half day visit to CERN itself.
Pregn'Art is an annual weekend event in the course of which several local artists exhibit their work in the gardens of the inhabitants of the hamlet ofPregnin. It is one of the events dedicated to sculpture and related subjects.
Saint-Genis-Pouilly benefits, as do all the other communes in the Pays de Gex, from the specific laws implementing the free trade zone. Under this arrangement, merchandise imported or exported to and from the European Union is not subject to customs duty.If this law has known important changes in the past,[38]it seems to have stabilised today.
Preschool and primary school groups include Groupe scolaire du Jura, Groupe scolaire du Lion, Groupe scolaire de Pregnin, and Groupe scolaire Boby Lapointe.[39]
The local junior high school is Collège Jacques Prévert, it opened in 1974 whilst using the École du Lion facilities and moved into its permanent facility in 1975.[40]
^"Répertoire national des élus: les maires" (in French). data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 13 September 2022.Archived from the original on 28 June 2020. Retrieved22 November 2022.
^However, because this station is further from the Jura mountains than Saint-Genis-Pouilly it underestimates the rainfall experienced in the commune. In effect, as we can see by consulting thebulletins mensuels|monthly bulletinArchived 28 September 2007 at theWayback Machine published by Météo France for the Department of Ain,more rain falls as we move away from thelake and approach the summit of the Jura.
^ZNIEFF type I are often small zones which present a particular natural interest (e.g. display a protected animal or vegetable species). They assist in the preservation of the biotopes concerned. Further information is available on the siteINPNArchived 13 August 2007 at theWayback Machine.
^Debombourg, Georges (1859).Atlas historique du département actuel de l'Ain. Printer: Louis Perrin.
^Debombourg, Georges (1859).Atlas historique du département actuel de l'Ain, preuve no 71: "In nomine .. Rodolphus rex ...Pulliacum villam in abbatia Agaunenfe per praecetum concederemus ... hoc donativum fummae pietatis gratia peractum hunc praeceptalem fieri praecipimus ..."
^Debombourg, Georges (1859).Atlas historique du département actuel de l'Ain, map for the period from 1601 to 1789.
^abcdMalgouverne A., Melo A. (1986).Histoire du Pays de Gex - Tome 1 : des origines à 1601. Intersections.
^VoirHistoire de Genève depuis son origine, A. Thourel, 1832, Tome 2, p. 338.
^VoirHistoire de la réunion a la France des provinces de Bresse, Bugey et Gex sous Charles-Emmanuel Ier, J. Baux, ?, p. 338.
^VoirHistoire politique et religieuse du Pays de Gex ..., J. Brossard, 1831, p. 411; reprise du fief de Farges (auquel le cens de Pouilly est attaché) par Pompée de Gribald (p. 418); mention is also made of the rejoining of the (cens) of Pouilly to the fiefdeom of Flies (p. 418); mention of the rejoining of the (rentes) and (cens) of Saint-Genix to the fiefdom of Sergier (p. 416) but also of Pougny (p. 417)
^VoirHistoire des églises réformées du Pays de Gex, T. Claparède, 1856, p. 130.
^La France protestante, E. & E. Haag, 1858, p. 412