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Badin House à Sceaux dans les Hauts-de-Seine

Badin House

    31 Rue Paul Couderc
    92330 Sceaux
Private property
Maison Badin
Maison Badin
Maison Badin
Crédit photo : Lionel Allorge - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
2000
1954
Construction of the villa
5 mai 2014
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The house and its garden, in total (cad. AG 19, cf. plan annexed to the decree): inscription by order of 5 May 2014

Key figures

Paul Nelson - Architect Designer of the house suspended.
Badin - Sponsor Banker and Braque's friend.
Fernand Léger - Painter Colored the claustras.
Bernard Lafaille - Engineer Technical contributor to the project.

Origin and history

Badin House, located in Sceaux in the Hauts-de-Seine, was built in 1954 by architect Paul Nelson for the banker Badin. This project is part of the modern architectural current, taking up the principle of the suspended house that Nelson had theorized before the Second World War. The stone side walls support metal portals, allowing to suspend the upper floor and free the interior spaces from any unnecessary structural support. This technical innovation, combined with a bold aesthetic, makes this villa a landmark in post-war architecture in France.

Fernand Léger, an iconic painter of the 20th century, contributed to the decoration of the house by intervening on the colouring of the facade claustras. This dialogue between architecture and visual art reflects the close links between Paul Nelson, the banker Badin and their circle of friends, including Georges Braque. The house, classified as a Historical Monument in 2014 with its garden, thus embodies a synthesis between technical innovation, artistic collaboration and cultural heritage.

The building is representative of the architectural experiments of the 1950s, when architects sought to break with traditional cannons to explore new forms of habitat. The Badin House, with its liberated volumes and landscape integration, illustrates this quest for modernity. Its inscription in the inventory of Historical Monuments underlines its importance in the history of French architecture of the twentieth century, while preserving a heritage linked to major figures of art and finance of the time.

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