Crédit photo : Jean-Jacques Reverend - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1900-1904
Manufacture construction
Manufacture construction 1900-1904 (≈ 1902)
Replaces the Gros-Caillou factory in Paris.
1904
Inauguration and beginning of production
Inauguration and beginning of production 1904 (≈ 1904)
1,200 workers, 500 cigarettes/minute.
3 juin 1940
German bombardment
German bombardment 3 juin 1940 (≈ 1940)
Two buildings destroyed (Luftwaffe).
1954
Postwar reactivation
Postwar reactivation 1954 (≈ 1954)
Reconstruction after destruction.
1977
Production definitely discontinued
Production definitely discontinued 1977 (≈ 1977)
Closed after 73 years of activity.
1984
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 1984 (≈ 1984)
Partial site protection.
1985-1989
Rehabilitation of housing/offices
Rehabilitation of housing/offices 1985-1989 (≈ 1987)
Joint project by Ceria and Coupel.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The whole manufacture, except buildings on the edge of Hartmann Street (Case AD 102 to 105): inscription by order of 9 October 1984
Key figures
Paul Berdin - Polytechnic engineer
Designs the manufacture (1900-1904).
Eugène Rolland - Tobacco engineer (XIXe)
Author of the reprinted Rolland model.
François Ceria et Alain Coupel - Rehabilitation architects
Transform the site (1980s).
Origin and history
The Manufacture des tabacs d'Issy-les-Moulineaux was built between 1900 and 1904 to replace the former Parisian manufacture of Gros-Caillou. Designed by engineer Paul Berdin according to the Rolland model (19th century), it embodies a solemn industrial architecture, with a 45 metre chimney and workshops organised around boiler plants. This model plan, developed by Eugène Rolland, aimed at optimal mechanization and smooth circulation between buildings, while affirming the prestige of a state establishment.
Inaugurated in 1904, the factory initially employed 1,200 workers, mostly women, to produce 500 cigarettes per minute. The increased mechanization increased the rate to 1,600 cigarettes in 1930, reducing the number to 533. Specializing in luxury cigarettes (Boyard, Marigny, Gypsies brands), it was destroyed during the German bombing in 1940 and rebuilt after the war. Its production finally ceased in 1977, followed by its inscription in the Historical Monuments in 1984.
Since 1985, architects François Ceria and Alain Coutel rehabilitated the site, partially demolishing the workshops to create a mixed set of housing, offices and shops. The chimney, symbol of the place, was shortened, while the stone administrative building, typical of the Rolland model, was preserved. Today, the former factory illustrates the conversion of industrial heritage into contemporary urban space.
Its architecture combines bricks and stones, with aerial galleries linking the workshops to limit the risks of fire. The two entrance pavilions, the courtyard of honour and the high enclosure walls recall its original vocation. The archives, preserved at the Hauts-de-Seine, testify to its economic and social role, especially during the world wars, where its production was requisitioned for the armies.
Ranked a Historic Monument in 1984 (except for Hartmann Street buildings), the factory is now privately owned. Its history reflects the French industrial changes, from the mechanical era to the tertiarization, while preserving a unique working and architectural memory in Île-de-France.
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