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Château de Saint-Ouen à Saint-Ouen en Seine-Saint-Denis

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style néo-classique et palladien
Seine-Saint-Denis

Château de Saint-Ouen

    12 à 46 Rue Albert-Dhalène
    93400 Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Château de Saint-Ouen
Crédit photo : KoS - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1664-1669
Construction of the first castle
2 mai 1814
Declaration of Saint-Ouen
8 juillet 1821
Laying the first stone
2 mai 1823
Opening of the castle
1871
Damage during the seat
9 mai 2019
Complete classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle in its entirety, including the peripheral gallery located in the basement and the ground constituting its cover, as shown surrounded by red in the plan annexed to the decree (box G 122): classification by order of 9 May 2019

Key figures

Louis XVIII - King of France Sponsor of the present castle, signatory of the Declaration.
Joachim Seiglières de Boisfranc - Superintendent of Finance Owner and sponsor of the first castle (XVIIe).
Madame de Pompadour - Favourite of Louis XV Restructured the castle in the 18th century.
Zoé Talon, comtesse du Cayla - Favourite of Louis XVIII Owner and decorator of the castle (1823).
Jean-Jacques-Marie Huvé - Architect Designer of the current castle (1821).
Pierre-Antoine Bellangé - Cabinetist-Decorator Furnished the castle for the Countess.

Origin and history

The Château de Saint-Ouen, located in Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine in Île-de-France, is an emblematic monument of the 1st quarter of the 19th century. Built under the Restoration, it replaces a 17th century castle built by Antoine Lepautre for Joachim Seiglières de Boisfranc, Superintendent of Finance of Louis XIV. This first castle, decorated with an orangery decorated by Bon Boullogne, was a luxurious reception place for the court, especially for Monsieur, brother of the king. It was then modified by the Marquise de Pompadour, which created a royal apartment and restructured the communes under the probable direction of Angel-Jacques Gabriel.

In 1811, the estate was acquired by Vincent Potocki, then by Louis XVIII in 1816. The latter had it destroyed to build the present neo-palladian castle, designed by Jean-Jacques-Marie Huvé. The king signed the Declaration of Saint-Ouen on 2 May 1814, restoring the monarchy while recognizing certain revolutionary freedoms. The castle was then given to its favourite, the Countess of Cayla, who inaugurated it in 1823 with sumptuous furniture and decors, made by renowned craftsmen such as Pierre-Antoine Bellangé and François Gérard.

After the death of the Countess in 1852, the castle was transformed into a racetrack, then into a factory and a military hospital during the First World War. Acquired by the municipality in 1958, it is restored and now houses a museum of local history and a conservatory. Ranked a historic monument in 2019, it preserves exceptional interior decorations, such as the dining room with the walnut magnifying glass and the living room commemorating the Saint-Ouen Declaration. His original furniture, transferred to Lorraine, is being reinstated.

The present castle, square with symmetrical facades, rises on three levels. Its ground floor, dedicated to receptions, retains almost its original décor, while the upper floors, although modified, keep a legible layout. The park, once extended to the Seine, has been fragmented by industrialization and urbanization, but the castle remains a major testimony to the architecture and political history of the Restoration.

Among the notable events, the castle welcomed in 1973 the Vietnamese delegation for the Paris peace agreements. More recently, it served as a back-end base for the Brazilian Olympic delegation at the Paris 2024 Games, highlighting its continued role in contemporary history.

External links