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Château du Bourdieu à Saint-Médard-en-Jalles en Gironde

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Gironde

Château du Bourdieu

    19 Avenue Montesquieu
    33160 Saint-Médard-en-Jalles
Crédit photo : PA - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1737
Acquisition by Delmester
1788
Construction of the house
1908
End of family management
6 février 1981
Registration MH
1999
Devastating storm
2024
Purchase by Bordeaux Métropole
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs; the stone staircase with its wrought iron ramp; The kitchen garden. (cad. AY 242): entry by order of 6 February 1981

Key figures

J. Delmestre - Builder and owner Built the house in 1788.
Famille Delmestre-Meyniac - Wine owners Management of the estate until 1908.

Origin and history

The château du Bourdieu is an 18th century wine estate, built in 1788 by J. Delmester on an estate acquired in 1737 by the royal broker Delmère. The main house, surrounded by two side pavilions, has a south-east facade decorated with bosses and mouldings, while the north facade remains sober. Inside, the kitchen retains its original stoves, and a stone staircase with a wrought iron ramp completes the architectural set.

The estate, which remained in the Delmester and Meyniac family until 1908, was a bourgeois cru exploited over three generations. Its park, once known for its varied species, suffered from the storm of 1999. In 2024, Bordeaux Métropole acquired the castle, concretizing a long-standing municipal project to enhance this central site, close to the village of Saint-Médard-en-Jalles.

On 6 February 1981, the castle protected its facades, roofs, the stone staircase and the kitchen garden. The decorative elements, such as J.D. ironwork initials or arc glass impostes, bear witness to the care taken in its construction. The estate is also on a map of 1848, highlighting its historical anchoring in the local landscape.

The architecture of the castle mixes symmetry and classical elegance: the central, protruding part frames two vantal doors, topped by semicircular arcades. The wrought iron balcony and two steps reinforce its noble character. The links with bosses, absent on the north facade, visually structure the building, reflecting 18th century aesthetic codes.

External links