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Château de Savoye à Villabon dans le Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Cher

Château de Savoye

    D36 Savoie
    18800 Villabon

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
limite XVe–XVIe siècles
Initial construction
1875–1880
Creation of the greenhouse model
1881–1914
Neo-Gothic Restoration
3 mars 1997
Historic Monument Protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The monumental greenhouse and its boiler room, the pond and its fountain, the stairs (cad. A 141, 143): registration by order of 3 March 1997

Key figures

Paul-Ernest Bourdin - Owner and sponsor President of the Bourges Commercial Court.
L. Grenthe - Greenhouse builder Manufacturer of greenhouses in Pontoise (1850–1914).

Origin and history

Savoye Castle, located in Villabon in Cher, is an ancient rural seigneurial residence built at the hinge of the 15th and 16th centuries. This modest monument, typical of small local seigneuries, reflects the civil architecture of the late Middle Ages before being profoundly transformed in the early twentieth century. The property, probably acquired by Paul-Ernest Bourdin – president of the Bourges Commercial Court – was then modernized in a neo-Gothic style, characteristic of the eclectic tastes of the time.

The centrepiece of the 20th century was a monumental Dutch-style greenhouse built between 1881 and 1914. Made by L. Grenthe, a specialized locksmith from Pontoise, this iron and cast iron structure is 27.20 m long for 7.40 m wide. It consists of a central pavilion surmounted by a dome and two glazed lateral wings, respectively housing a warm greenhouse and a temperate greenhouse. An outdoor gallery and a maintenance bridge complete the assembly, while an adjacent boiler room operated. This model, created around 1875–80, is identical to that of the castle of Osny (Val-d的Oise), raising the hypothesis of displacement or reproduction.

The château park, redeveloped to enhance the greenhouse, still preserves some original elements: a circular cement basin decorated with a cast iron basin, as well as a staircase linking the greenhouse to three flat rectangular basins. These remains bear witness to the landscape ambition of the owners, mixing horticultural utility and picturesque aesthetics. The greenhouse, boiler room, basin and stairs have been protected under the Historic Monuments since 1997, highlighting their outstanding heritage value.

The history of the castle thus illustrates two distinct epochs: that of a medieval rural seigneury, and that of a bourgeois residence embellished by innovative technical and decorative arrangements. These transformations reflect the social and cultural changes of France between the 19th and 20th centuries, where ancient heritage becomes a medium of modernity and distinction.

External links