Happy New Year 2026

Institute

The entire ENSTA community wishes you all the best for 2026!

ENSTA is kicking off 2026 by celebrating the first anniversary of its transformation.

At the crossroads of societal and industrial challenges, France's oldest engineering Institute continues to look to the future with boldness and conviction.

Since January 2025, ENSTA has expanded its academic and scientific scope within the Institut Polytechnique de Paris, bringing together the areas of excellence of the Paris-Saclay and Brest campuses. It thus confirms its key role in the competitiveness and strategic autonomy of France and Europe, at the heart of sectors of sovereignty such as defense, mobility, energy, the sea, digital technology, and health.

ENSTA wishes you a happy, inspired, and successful 2026.

L'ENSTA vous souhaite une belle année 2026
ENSTA wishes you a happy New Year 2026

Our latest news

Alumni | Training | Research
A thesis on characterizing the strength of a submerged textile structure

Noise pollution generated during the installation of offshore wind turbines is attracting increasing attention. An engineer trained at ENSTA in the specialty of “mechanical modeling of materials and structures,” Jeanne Cavoit wrote her thesis on the...

A thesis on characterizing the strength of a submerged textile structure

Noise pollution generated during the installation of offshore wind turbines is attracting increasing attention. An engineer trained at ENSTA in the specialty of “mechanical modeling of materials and structures,” Jeanne Cavoit wrote her thesis on the...

Alumni | Innovation
DeepFoil: Two ENSTA Graduates Are Reinventing Underwater Exploration

Graduates in architecture and naval hydrodynamics, Emillia Perdigon and Paul François have designed the DeepFoil, a flying underwater wing that allows for effortless movement underwater. Fueled by public enthusiasm and investor support, their project is...

DeepFoil: Two ENSTA Graduates Are Reinventing Underwater Exploration

Graduates in architecture and naval hydrodynamics, Emillia Perdigon and Paul François have designed the DeepFoil, a flying underwater wing that allows for effortless movement underwater. Fueled by public enthusiasm and investor support, their project is...

Innovation | Research
Gabriel Betton: Exploring the karst networks

Beneath our feet, in the darkness of the underground, a natural network spanning more than a third of France’s territory supplies drinking water to nearly 30 million people. But the quality of this vast freshwater reservoir is threatened by climate change...

Gabriel Betton: Exploring the karst networks

Beneath our feet, in the darkness of the underground, a natural network spanning more than a third of France’s territory supplies drinking water to nearly 30 million people. But the quality of this vast freshwater reservoir is threatened by climate change...