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Old house Müntz à Soultz-sous-Forêts dans le Bas-Rhin

Bas-Rhin

Old house Müntz

    48 Rue du Docteur Michel Deutsch
    67250 Soultz-sous-Forêts
Ancienne maison Müntz
Ancienne maison Müntz
Ancienne maison Müntz
Crédit photo : © Ralph Hammann - Wikimedia Commons - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1er quart XIXe siècle (1807-1815)
Construction of house
1825
Presence on the cadastre
5 septembre 1996
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades, roofs and fences; inside: main staircase and pavement of the corridor on the ground floor (Box 7 137): inscription by order of 5 September 1996

Key figures

Müntz (notaire impérial) - Sponsor Owner and builder of the building.
Weinbrenner - Suspected architect Possible allocation of the architectural project.

Origin and history

Müntz House is a neo-classical house built in the 1st quarter of the 19th century (between 1807 and 1815) in Soultz-sous-Forêts, Lower Rhine. Sponsored by the imperial notary Müntz, a member of a family of notables established in the commune since 1776, it illustrates the influence of local elites under the Empire. Its architecture, perhaps attributed to architect Weinbrenner, combines brick and wood panel, with a wooden hanging staircase and a stone basement. The house is already on the cadastral plan of 1825.

The main building, on a square floor, is complemented by a wooden annex housing accommodation and a shed. The facades, roofs, fences, as well as the main stairway and pavement of the corridor were protected by an inscription to the historical monuments on 5 September 1996. Today owned by the commune, the house bears witness to the Alsatian bourgeois heritage of the early nineteenth century, marked by neo-classical influences and a functional spatial organization.

The building is part of the urban context of Soultz-sub-Forêts, a city where notable families, such as the Müntz, played a central role in the local administration and economy. The presence of an imperial notary as sponsor reflects the importance of the legal and administrative professions in the small Alsatian cities under Napoleon I. The house, by its style and conservation, offers a rare example of domestic architecture of this period in the region.

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