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Odratzheim Castle dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Bas-Rhin

Odratzheim Castle

    10 Rue du Château
    67520 Odratzheim
Château dOdratzheim
Château dOdratzheim
Château dOdratzheim
Crédit photo : Denis Helfer - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1560 et 1624
Recovered trolley doors
1765
Construction of the castle
28 mars 1940
Historical monument classification
1940
Accidental fire
1945
Post-fire reconstruction
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades, roofs, wooden staircase: inscription by decree of 28 March 1940

Key figures

Augustin Pierre Geraudon - Sponsor Royal War Commissioner, initial owner.
Joseph Massol - Architect Author of the plans in 1765.

Origin and history

Odratzheim Castle, located on 10 rue du Château in Odratzheim (Bas-Rhin, Grand Est), is an 18th-century building built in 1765 for Augustin Pierre Geraudon, Royal War Commissioner. His plans were designed by architect Joseph Massol. The castle replaces an earlier building, of which it preserves two cart doors dated 1560 and 1624, recovered respectively from an old mill (recognizable to its wheel carved on the key) and an unidentified structure.

The architecture combines plastered sandstone stone and cut stone for structural elements (soiling, angle chains). The central body, decorated with triangular frontons, houses a remarkable wooden staircase, with a carved ramp shaped like a basket of flowers. The castle was partially destroyed by a fire in 1940, losing its broken roof, and then rebuilt in 1945 with notable modifications, especially in the attic and interior fittings.

Ranked a historic monument since 28 March 1940 for its facades, roofs and staircase, the castle illustrates the Alsatian architectural evolution between the Ancient Regime and the 20th century. The commons, on the ground floor, mix traditional masonry and wooden panels added during restorations. Today, the site retains traces of its successive reallocations, although its current use (visits, accommodation) is not specified in the available sources.

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