The new encyclopedic-style website aims to demystify the complicated world of watchmaking. Photo: Atelier Laurent Ferrier
The new encyclopedic-style website aims to demystify the complicated world of watchmaking. Photo: Atelier Laurent Ferrier
The new encyclopedic-style website aims to demystify the complicated world of watchmaking. Photo: Atelier Laurent Ferrier
The new encyclopedic-style website aims to demystify the complicated world of watchmaking. Photo: Atelier Laurent Ferrier

Horopedia: new Wikipedia-style website will simplify the world of watches


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Watchmaking will soon have an online platform dedicated to explaining every element of this complex and fascinating world.

Horopedia.org — a portmanteau of horology, the art of making timepieces, and encyclopaedia — was announced this week in Switzerland as part of the Geneva Watch Days 2022 Pavilion. No launch date has yet been revealed.

Inspired by Wikipedia's open-access approach to information, the new site aims to provide in-depth, accurate and expert knowledge of watchmaking. Using written descriptions, imagery and even short films, it will help demystify the industry, while shining a spotlight on the human hands behind every element.

The Horopedia.org team said the platform will be dedicated to sharing know-how and the artistic skills “accumulated by the industry over the centuries”.

Describing itself as a “watchmaking ecosystem”, the site will allow the watchmaking community to contribute to the content "on a voluntary and unsolicited basis”, with the hope that organic growth will follow.

From left, the founders of Horopedia Philippe Dufour, Marc Andre, Helmut Crott and Andre Colard at Geneva Watch Days in August 2022. Photo: Horopedia
From left, the founders of Horopedia Philippe Dufour, Marc Andre, Helmut Crott and Andre Colard at Geneva Watch Days in August 2022. Photo: Horopedia

One element of the site will deal with explanations behind the purpose and function of every piece in a watch movement, such as an escapement or the bridge joining two elements.

It will also dive into the more complex arena of complications, which are a test of the ingenuity and expertise of a house, while remaining entirely functional. The tourbillon is one such complication. Essentially a watch movement floating on a gyroscope within a timepiece, it is one of the most demanding to master. It also helps maintain accuracy, by reducing the effect of gravity of a watch's tiny, intricately moving pieces.

Free-to-use, the site will offer anyone, from high-end watchmakers to collectors and horology enthusiasts, the chance to explore how every element of a watch is designed, created and executed.

The site will be multilingual, though no details on the languages available have been revealed yet.

Horopedia.org has been created by the Horopedia Foundation, a Swiss non-profit comprising four industry experts. Respected watchmaker Philippe Dufour is president, while Marc Andre, founder of TheWatchesTV, is executive director. They are joined by Helmut Crott, who has provided horological expertise to major auction houses for four decades, and Andre Colard, founder of EPHJ trade fair.

Navdeep Suri, India's Ambassador to the UAE

There has been a longstanding need from the Indian community to have a religious premises where they can practise their beliefs. Currently there is a very, very small temple in Bur Dubai and the community has outgrown this. So this will be a major temple and open to all denominations and a place should reflect India’s diversity.

It fits so well into the UAE’s own commitment to tolerance and pluralism and coming in the year of tolerance gives it that extra dimension.

What we will see on April 20 is the foundation ceremony and we expect a pretty broad cross section of the Indian community to be present, both from the UAE and abroad. The Hindu group that is building the temple will have their holiest leader attending – and we expect very senior representation from the leadership of the UAE.

When the designs were taken to the leadership, there were two clear options. There was a New Jersey model with a rectangular structure with the temple recessed inside so it was not too visible from the outside and another was the Neasden temple in London with the spires in its classical shape. And they said: look we said we wanted a temple so it should look like a temple. So this should be a classical style temple in all its glory.

It is beautifully located - 30 minutes outside of Abu Dhabi and barely 45 minutes to Dubai so it serves the needs of both communities.

This is going to be the big temple where I expect people to come from across the country at major festivals and occasions.

It is hugely important – it will take a couple of years to complete given the scale. It is going to be remarkable and will contribute something not just to the landscape in terms of visual architecture but also to the ethos. Here will be a real representation of UAE’s pluralism.

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Updated: September 01, 2022, 6:43 AM