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Château de Villiers dans les Yvelines

Yvelines

Château de Villiers

    13 Avenue du Bon Roi Saint-Louis
    78300 Poissy
Auteur inconnuUnknown author

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
années 1860
Construction of the castle
1870
Hospital for the wounded
1877
Wedding Hély d'Oissel-de-Ségur
1928
Morcellation of the domain
1976
Acquisition by the Town Hall
2012
Film shooting
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Léonce Hély d'Oissel - Baron, Master of Petitions Initial sponsor of the castle.
Pierre Marie Maurice Henry de Ségur - Historian, Hely d'Oissel's son-in-law Owner after 1877.
Théophile Bourgeois - Architect The castle grew in the 1880s.
Germain Debré - Architect Add a wing in 1939.
Donat Agache - Director of Kuhlmann Establishments Owner in 1928, transformed into a recreation center.

Origin and history

Villiers Castle, located in Poissy in the Yvelines, was built in the 1860s in a new Louis XIII style. It replaces a hunting lodge mentioned on maps of the eighteenth century. Baron Léonce Hély d'Oissel, master of petitions to the Conseil d'État and mayor of Poissy, was the initial sponsor, along with his son Frédéric. The estate then moved to Ségur's family through the marriage of Thérèse Hély d'Oissel with Pierre de Ségur in 1877.

During the 1870 war, the castle served as a hospital for the wounded. In the 1880s, architect Théophile Bourgeois added commons and interior remodeling, incorporating stained glass windows and woodwork decorated with the coat of arms of the Hély d'Oissel and Ségur families. The estate was fragmented in 1928: the Kuhlmann Establishments acquired the castle and its park to make it a leisure centre, while the Agache and Savoy families built a mansion and the Savoye villa respectively.

In 1939, a wing was added by architect Germain Debré. Purchased by the town hall of Poissy in 1976, the castle becomes an aerated center, then a place of exhibitions and receptions. In 2012, he set the scene for Jean-Pierre Mocky's film Dors mon bunny. Today, only the 12-hectare park, including an educational farm, is accessible to the public. The castle hosts municipal or private events, as well as historical reconstructions, such as that of 2014 for the centenary of the First World War.

External links