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House à Bordeaux en Gironde

House

    42 Place Gambetta
    33000 Bordeaux
Private property
Crédit photo : JuliaCasado - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1745
Creation of Dauphine Square
1750
Financing of facades
1762
Simplification of facades
1770-1780
Completion of the square
15 novembre 1927
Historic Monument Protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The façade and the roof (Box KW 0217): inscription by decree of 15 November 1927

Key figures

Intendant de Tourny - Project Initiator Ordonna created the place.
Intendant Boutin - Approver of the new plan Validated the simplification in 1762.
Jurats de Bordeaux - Financers of facades Borrowed in 1750.

Origin and history

The house located Place Gambetta (former Dauphine Square) in Bordeaux is part of a major architectural complex of the eighteenth century, designed after the Place de la Bourse. This project is part of a policy of rehabilitating and embellishing the city led by the intendant of Tourny around 1745. The square, formed on lands west of the Dauphine and Dijeaux gates, was designed to centralize the main roads of the city. In 1750 the Jurats of Bordeaux contracted a loan to finance the construction of uniform facades, organized on the ground floor with arcades, a noble floor, an attic and an attic.

In 1762, a new architect proposed to Intendant Boutin a simplified plan for the facades, abandoning the initial forebody and balustrades for the benefit of a devoidly sober and attic. The square was only completed between 1770 and 1780, although its style reflected that of the first half of the eighteenth century. The buildings, made of cut stone, have regular arcades on the ground floor, window doors decorated with mascarons on the first floor, and some have a second floor. The facade and roof of this house were protected by an order of inscription under the Historical Monuments on November 15, 1927.

Gambetta Square, rectangular, symbolizes Bordeaux's classic urban planning, with two major arteries opening at its angles. Its ordinance reflects the influence of Parisian models, adapted to local needs. The wrought iron balconies and carved mascarons illustrate the artisanal know-how of the period, while the uniformity of the facades demonstrates a desire for modernization and architectural harmony, characteristic of the Lights in Aquitaine.

External links