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Former Lazaret of Aspretto à Ajaccio en Corse-du-sud

Corse-du-sud

Former Lazaret of Aspretto


    20090 Ajaccio

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1837
Request for construction
1843-1845
Start of work
1847
Receipt of work
16 mars 1977
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs; fence walls (box AH 50): entry by order of 16 March 1977

Key figures

Vincent Lottero - Municipal architect First project manager
Jean Baptiste François Cotin - Departmental architect Reprinted the site in 1845

Origin and history

The ancient lazaret of Aspretto was commissioned in 1837 by the health authority of Ajaccio to replace the lazaret of the Sanguinaries, considered too far from the city. The works, initiated in 1843 under the direction of architect Lottero, were interrupted in 1845 due to lack of funding. The state then took over, entrusting the construction site to the departmental architect Cotin, and the works were completed in 1847.

Although conceived as a lazaret, the building never served this function, as the Minister of Public Works considered that those of Toulon and Marseille were sufficient. It was eventually used as stables, tobacco and hemp depots, workshop, and even accommodation for inmates assigned to the construction of the imperial road. Its architecture, organised around a central courtyard, includes a main hemicycle building and a rectangular triangular gable building, all surrounded by a wall of enclosure.

The site, connected to the sea by a garden leading to a landing, was listed at the Historic Monuments in 1977 for its facades, roofs and fence walls. Private property today, its state of conservation and accessibility remain poorly documented, although its original plan demonstrates an ambitious health design for the time.

External links