Origin and history
Castel Béranger, located 14 rue Jean-de-La-Fontaine in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, is the first Art Nouveau report building built in the capital. Designed between 1895 and 1898 by 27-year-old Hector Guimard, it marks a turning point in Parisian architecture by breaking with traditional codes. Inspired by Eugène Viollet-le-Duc and Victor Horta, Guimard develops a bold style, mixing asymmetry, sets of materials (brick, stone, flammated sandstone, wrought iron) and organic decorations, while rationalizing interior spaces for a middle-class clientele.
The building, commissioned by Elizabeth Fournier, a widow wishing to invest in rental real estate, consists of 36 housing units and 4 artist workshops, including those of painters Paul Signac and Jeanne Selmersheim. Its façade, deliberately asymmetrical, alternates protruding, withdrawals and decorative motifs in iron and ceramic, while the interior, treated as a "total art work", incorporates elements designed by Guimard himself: stained glass, panelling, grids, and even a telephone booth, rarity for the time. The building won the first facade contest in Paris in 1898, dedicating its architect.
Ranked a historical monument in 1992 after decades of disinterest, the Castel Béranger now embodies a manifesto of Art Nouveau. Guimard expressed his modernist vision, combining functionality and aesthetics, while launching his career. Despite initial criticisms (known as "Deranged Castel" or "House of the Devils"), the building survived the destructions of the 20th century and was restored between 1999 and 2010, partially regaining its original decorations thanks to the archives preserved at the Musée d'Orsay.
The influence of Castel Béranger goes beyond his time: he inspired other Parisian architects and marked the beginning of the "Guimard style", characterized by dynamic lines and a total integration of the decor. Hector Guimard, now a major figure in Art Nouveau, lived and worked there, using his accomodation as a laboratory for his future achievements, including the famous entrances to the Paris metro. Today, although transformed into a condominium and not open to the public, the building remains a symbol of the architectural innovation of the Belle Époque.
The construction of the Castel Béranger is part of a changing urban context: the 16th arrondissement, still partially workers and artisanal at the end of the 19th century, gradually S-bourgeois. Guimard, from the local Catholic bourgeoisie, draws sponsors from networks such as those of the Roszé or Jassed families. The construction site, launched in autumn 1895, enjoys exceptional creative freedom, with Elizabeth Fournier granting the architect a "white map". The materials, chosen for their economy and expressivity (glazed brick, mill, copper), reflect this duality between budgetary constraint and aesthetic ambition.
The heritage of Castel Béranger also resides in its social dimension: designed for moderate rents, it incorporates various apartments, adapted to artists and bourgeois families. The richly decorated common areas contrast with the relative simplicity of housing, where Guimard has banned corridors in favour of fluid spaces. Ranked among the first Art Nouveau monuments protected in France, the building benefited from recent restorations (2009–2010) aimed at restoring its original decorations, such as wallpapers or stained glass windows, from the architect's archives.
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