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Bas-Buissons Sanatorial Complex à Dreux dans l'Eure-et-Loir

Eure-et-Loir

Bas-Buissons Sanatorial Complex

    17 Rue de la Muette
    28100 Dreux
Complexe sanatorial des Bas-Buissons
Complexe sanatorial des Bas-Buissons
Complexe sanatorial des Bas-Buissons
Complexe sanatorial des Bas-Buissons
Crédit photo : Kilyann Le Hen - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1928-1932
Construction of sanatorium
1935
Adding the house of convalescence
1940-1945
Second World War
1956
Start of decommissioning
1990
Final closure
2021-2022
Rehabilitation and classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs of the built parts of the former Sanatorial complex and the unbuilt parts corresponding to the gardens and the vegetable garden, all located 19 and 21 rue de la Muette, on plots 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 40, 42, 43, 45, 46, 47, 53, 54, 56, 57, 61, 286 and 288 section BW: inscription by order of 11 April 2022 amended by order of 26 December 2022

Key figures

Maurice Viollette - Mayor of Dreux (1908-1959) Initiator of the sanatorial project.
Georges Beauniée - Municipal architect Co-conceptor of sanatorium.
André Sarrut - Parisian architect Winner of the 1928 competition.
Gabriel Roche - War Director Resistant saving Jews.
Thérèse Viollette - Wife of Maurice Villette Preventorium named in his honor.

Origin and history

The Bas-Buissons sanatorium, located in the woods of La Muette in Dreux (Eure-et-Loir), was built between 1928 and 1932 by architects Georges Beauniée and André Sarrut under the impulse of Mayor Maurice Villette. Intended to fight pulmonary tuberculosis, it included the Laennec clinic (sanatorium) and the Thérèse Villette preventorium. Designed to accommodate up to 1,000 patients, mainly children, it used solariums as its main treatment. Its modern Art Deco-style architecture optimised the sun thanks to its extended pavilions (up to 370 metres for the Pasteur Pavilion).

During its peak in the 1930s, sanatorium played a key role in public health, although its capacity was never fully attained. During World War II (1940-1945), its director Gabriel Roche saved Jews by falsifying medical certificates under the Vichy regime. As early as 1945, the decline began with medical progress: disused in 1956, he then served as a retirement home (1962-1980) and then received rare diseases until the 1980s. Abandoned in 1990, it became a famous haunted place, surrounded by legends (like that of a 14-year-old girl).

Purchased by the city of Dreux in 1999 for a symbolic franc, the site was partially classified as a historical monument in 2022. A rehabilitation project (€100 million) was launched in 2021 to transform it into a residential, hotel and cultural hub, including apartments, spa, ecolodges and artist residences. The Laennec Pavilion has already become a Mother Centre. The site, surrounded by walls since 2021 for security reasons, embodies both a medical heritage and a painful collective memory.

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