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Renaissance Café in Alençon dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Café classé MH
Orne

Renaissance Café in Alençon

    4 Rue Saint-Blaise
    61000 Alençon
Crédit photo : Romain Bréget - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
milieu du XIXe siècle
First coffee certificate
2007
Acquisition by a promoter
mai 2008
Final closure
2 février 2009
Registration historical monument
23 juin 2020
Rehabilitation announcement
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The two large rooms on the ground floor, with their decorations and the split wall separating them from the back room (Box BS 19): inscription by order of 2 February 2009

Key figures

Information non disponible - Information not available No key character explicitly mentioned in the sources.

Origin and history

The Café la Renaissance, located 4 rue Saint-Blaise in Alençon, in the department of Orne, is an attested establishment since the mid-19th century. Its interior decoration, inspired by the second French Renaissance of the 1530s, is distinguished by painted panels, pilasters decorated with discs and interlaces, as well as caissons populated by grotesques and coat of arms of the city. These decorative elements, especially in the large hall, reflect a scholarly artistic overload, typical of 19th century eclecticism.

The café has seen several historic milestones: its closure in May 2008 after the acquisition by a promoter in 2007, followed by the registration of its rooms and their decorations as historic monuments on 2 February 2009. Despite plans to reopen the site several times (2016, 2018, 2019), the site was finally rehabilitated in June 2020 by Desjouis, the owner of the site. This project was the fourth in ten years.

The interior architecture of the café is characterized by a thread of two rooms with contrasting décor: the large room, richly decorated, and the back room, more sober, originally lit by a natural zenithal opening. In the 1970s, the design of a bar changed the original space unit, while preserving major decorative elements such as mirrors, oval niches and carved ewers. These details demonstrate the historic and artistic significance of the site, now protected.

The Renaissance Café illustrates the evolution of urban sociability in the 19th century, where cafes played a central role in the cultural and social life of cities. In Alençon, as in other French cities, these establishments served as meeting points for local elites and artists, reflecting the aesthetic tastes and social aspirations of the time. The protection of its decorations in 2009 underscores the heritage value of this architectural and cultural testimony.

External links