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Nice Agricultural Palace dans les Alpes-Maritimes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Palais
Alpes-Maritimes

Nice Agricultural Palace

    113 Promenade des Anglais
    06300 Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Palais de lagriculture de Nice
Crédit photo : Miniwark - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1860
SCAH Foundation
1894
Recognition of public utility
1900-1901
Construction of the Palais
8 avril 1901
Inauguration by Émile Loubet
28 mars 1991
Registration for historical monuments
2012
End of restoration work
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Palais de l'Agriculture (Box MO 228): Registration by order of 28 March 1991

Key figures

Émile Loubet - President of the Republic Inaugurated the Palace in 1901.
Paul Marin - Arts and Crafts Engineer Manufacturer and Secretary General of the SCAH.

Origin and history

The Palais de l'Agriculture de Nice, located at 113 promenade des Anglais, was built between 1900 and 1901 under the direction of engineer Paul Marin, Secretary General of the Central Society for Agriculture, Horticulture and Acclimation of Nice and the Alpes-Maritimes (SCAH). This building, inaugurated on April 8, 1901 by President Émile Loubet, embodies Belle Époque architecture and serves as a seat for an institution founded in 1860, recognized as a public utility in 1894.

SCAH, a scholarly society dedicated to agriculture and acclimatization, commissioned this building to house its activities. The Palace, the property of this association, was inscribed in the historical monuments on 28 March 1991 and obtained the label "Heritage of the twentieth century". Its restoration, completed in 2012, preserved this symbol of the scientific and economic dynamics of the early twentieth century.

The Palais de l'Agriculture also illustrates the importance of learned societies in local development. Through its walls, it reflects the exchanges between science, politics and heritage, marked by figures such as Paul Marin or Émile Loubet. Its location on the promenade of the English makes it a historical and tourist landmark, anchored in the identity of Nice.

Available sources, including Wikipedia and Monumentum, highlight its role in promoting Mediterranean horticulture and agriculture. Bibliographic references, such as Hervé Barelli's work, deepen its impact between 1860 and 1914, a key period for the regional economy. Today, the Palace remains an active place, linked to the memory of the agricultural and architectural innovations of the French Riviera.

External links