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Fork of Vevey

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Historic site in Vevey, Switzerland
Fork of Vevey
Fork of Vevey, 18 July 2020
LocationLake Léman, Vevey, Switzerland
Coordinates46°27′28″N 6°50′47″E / 46.45776°N 6.84627°E / 46.45776; 6.84627
Governing bodyAlimentarium (museum of food)
WebsiteFork of Vevey

Fork of Vevey (French: La Fourchette de Vevey) is an 8-metre-tall (26 ft), 1.3-metre-wide (4.3 ft) stainless steel fork on the shore of Lake Geneva in Vevey, Switzerland. Fork of Vevey is a part of the Alimentarium, a Vevey-based museum with a permanent exhibition on food and Nestlé's history.

The fork was initially created in 1995 by the Swiss artists Jean-Pierre Zaugg and C.Toda to mark the Alimentarium's tenth anniversary. The fork was removed in 1996 but reinstated about a decade later, following a public petition. The Alimentarium claims that the Fork of Vevey is the world's largest fork, and since 2014 the Guinness Book of World Records has listed it as such, but there is a larger fork (11 metres (36 ft) long) in Springfield, Missouri, and an even larger one (12 metres (39 ft) long) in Creede, Colorado.

  • Alimentarium (museum of food) in Vevey, Switzerland Alimentarium (museum of food) in Vevey, Switzerland
  • Fork of Vevey Fork of Vevey
Fork of Vevey, Switzerland

References

  1. "The world's biggest fork is in front of the Alimentarium". Alimentarium. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  2. "That great big Fork of Vevey". Wordpress blog by Exxtracts. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  3. Balibouse, Denis (5 June 2008). "A giant fork sculpture on the shores of Lake Leman in Switzerland". ABC. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  4. "The world's biggest fork is in front of the Alimentarium". Alimentarium. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  5. "The Fork". Alimentarium. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  6. "Fork records in The Guinness Book of World Records". The Guinness Book of World Records. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  7. Records, Guinness World (September 2015). Guinness World Records 2016. p. 91. ISBN 978-1910561065.
  8. Mauricio Venegas (13 June 2019). "World's largest fork in Springfield is the site of a million selfies". Columbia Missourian. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  9. Terri Cook (31 May 2016). "Only in Colorado: The World's Largest Fork". 5280. Retrieved 26 January 2021.

External links

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