Pierre-Jules Boulanger, an architect by
profession, ran Citroën
after
the company was acquired by Michelin,
initially along with Pierre
Michelin and Robert Puiseux and after the
former's death in a car crash
in 1937 he ran the company until 1950.
He
was
the man responsible for the concept of the
TPV - it is said that he
realised the need while observing local
farmers who used horses and
carts and bicycles in order to get their
produce to market. He
envisaged a cheap, minimalistic, low
maintenance solution in which all
extraneous and unnecessary components were
to be deleted.
He
was
also an astute business man who realised
that when Citroën ceased
production of the 5CV in 1926, the company
had left the bottom end of
the marketplace to its rivals, Peugeot and
Simca.
In
1934,
just before Michelin acquired the company,
Pierre Michelin
instructed his engineers to build a
tyre-testing vehicle on which
certain automotive experiments might be
undertaken.
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