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Château de Cheyrelle à Dienne dans le Cantal

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Cantal

Château de Cheyrelle

    La Cheyrelle
    15300 Dienne
Château de Cheyrelle
Château de Cheyrelle
Crédit photo : Père Igor - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1858
First stone of the castle
1903-1905
Transformation Art Nouveau
1940
Evacuation of heavy water
27 mars 2006
Historical Monument
2017-2024
Restoration and reopening
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle in its entirety, as well as the annexes and the garden (Cases AS 151 to 155, 160, 254): classification by decree of 27 March 2006

Key figures

Auguste Felgères - Founder of the castle Postmaster at Murat, initiate construction.
Pierre Felgères - Owner and Mayor of Dienne Sponsor of the 1903-1905 transformations.
René Dulong - Parisian architect Collaborate on the renovation with Serrurier-Bovy.
Gustave Serrurier-Bovy - Architect and decorator Art Nouveau Author of the avant-garde transformation.
Jacqueline Felgères-Trillat - Last inheritance Felgers Relaunching the Salers breeding, Farm Merit Award.
Jean-Jacques Trillat - Physicist and husband of Jacqueline Involved in the evacuation of heavy water in 1940.

Origin and history

The Château de la Cheyrelle, located in Dienne (Cantal) at 1,100 m above sea level, is a mansion built from 1858 on the foundations of a medieval barn. Auguste Felgères, postmaster at Murat, laid the first stone to make it a country castel. Agricultural activity continued until the 1990s, marking its rural and functional anchor for more than a century.

Between 1903 and 1905, Pierre Felgères, mayor of Dienne and coulissier parisienne, entrusted his transformation to architect René Dulong and Gustave Serrurier-Bovy, major figure of Art Nouveau. They apply their visionary principles (clarity, rationality, functionalism), inspired by the Arts & Crafts movement. The ensemble, including commons, guardhouse and park of 1,7 hectares, becomes a unique architectural manifesto, still intact today.

The property remained in the Felgères family until 1989, with a continued agricultural activity, including the breeding of Salers cows revived by Jacqueline Felgères-Trillat (Agricultural Merit Award in 1967). Her husband, physicist Jean-Jacques Trillat, played a discreet but historic role in 1940, participating in the evacuation of heavy water from the Joliot Curie laboratory to Riom during the Second World War.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 2006 for its "exceptional interest" as a complete work by Serraurier-Bovy, the castle was bought in 1990 by Parisian individuals and then in 2014. Since 2017, a restoration campaign allows it to reopen its visits in 2024, after decades of meticulous preservation of its interior and exterior decor.

The architecture of the castle consists of two main buildings: the original "Château" (1858-1868) and the "New House" (1904) housing commons and service rooms. The park offers a remarkable view of the Santoire valley and the Limon plateau. The medieval barn, the last agricultural vestige, was demolished in 2006 before the final classification.

External links