Establishment of the Joint Commission 1841 (≈ 1841)
Ask for a position to protect the eagle.
31 juillet 1846
Circular of the Ministry of War
Circular of the Ministry of War 31 juillet 1846 (≈ 1846)
Plan-type 3 for guard bodies.
11 juillet 1848
Opinion of the Committee on Fortifications
Opinion of the Committee on Fortifications 11 juillet 1848 (≈ 1848)
Undersized ammunition accommodation.
1857
Counter-location project
Counter-location project 1857 (≈ 1857)
Permanent location near the tank.
1859–1860
Construction of guard corps
Construction of guard corps 1859–1860 (≈ 1860)
Made of shale and granite.
1874
Non-conservation by the Commission
Non-conservation by the Commission 1874 (≈ 1874)
Start of decommissioning process.
27 mai 1889
Official decommissioning
Official decommissioning 27 mai 1889 (≈ 1889)
Early transfer to Public Works.
10 juin 1891
Transfer to Department of Public Works
Transfer to Department of Public Works 10 juin 1891 (≈ 1891)
With the eagle and the old battery.
1926
Remission to Fields
Remission to Fields 1926 (≈ 1926)
Unused building by Bridges and Chaussées.
juillet 1939
Request for rental by Robert Desnos
Request for rental by Robert Desnos juillet 1939 (≈ 1939)
Project interrupted by war.
1954
First sale to an individual
First sale to an individual 1954 (≈ 1954)
Beginning of civil conversion.
années 1970
Transformation into housing
Transformation into housing années 1970 (≈ 1970)
Major changes to the terrace.
30 octobre 2000
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 30 octobre 2000 (≈ 2000)
Protection of the guard body (Box ZL 25).
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Guard corps (Box ZL 25): registration by order of 30 October 2000
Key figures
Général Noizet - Inspector General of Engineering
Recommanda the current location in 1848.
Robert Desnos - Surrealist poet
Trying to rent the building in 1939.
Origin and history
The guard corps of Fort Larron, located 30 metres north-west of the Baiguade de la Belle Fontaine at the Palais (Bretagne), was built between 1859 and 1860 according to the model plan No. 3 of the Ministry of War (1846). Intended to monitor a source of drinking water (aiguad), it is distinguished by its artificial glacis masking the view from the sea and its walls-traverse masonry on the terrace, partially removed in the 1970s. Unlike coastal batteries, its ammunition premises were undersized by decision of the Fortification Committee (1848). The southern façade bears the inscription "Port Larron Post – 1859", recalling its initial function of defending and controlling maritime approaches.
Its final location, in a valley west of the tank, resulted from a counter-project of 1857, after the rediscovery of a lost report from Inspector-General Noizet (1848) recommending this positioning. Built as a local shale and continental granite, the building was declassified in 1889 and transferred to the Domaines in 1926. Although the poet Robert Desnos tried to rent it in 1939, the German occupation (1940–44) made it a barracks. Transformed into a private home in the 1970s, it retains three of its four original faces, despite modern developments (covering the terrace, piercings).
The post of Port Larron was part of the Breton coastal defence network of the 19th century, responding to the directives of the Joint Coastal Armaments Commission (1841). Initially planned to replace an existing battery, its project evolved under the influence of military engineering inspectors, illustrating local strategic adaptations. Ranked Historic Monument in 2000, it bears witness to the standardized military architecture of the time, while bearing traces of its later civilian uses, from attempts at artistic rental to its residential conversion.
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