Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Metz Guard en Moselle

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Fortification

Metz Guard

    2 Place d'Armes
    57000 Metz
Ownership of the municipality
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Corps de garde de Metz
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1728
Start of urban project
1761-1771
Construction of guard corps
1er avril 1921
Historical monument classification
2007
Restoration of the façade
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and blankets (Box 24 1): by order of 1 April 1921

Key figures

Charles Louis Auguste Fouquet de Belle-Isle - Marshal and urbanist Initiator of the Royal Square Project.
Jacques-François Blondel - Architect Creator of the guard corps.
Christophe Bottineau - Chief Architect Directed the restoration in 2007.

Origin and history

The guard corps of Metz, located in Place d'Armes, was designed by the architect Jacques-François Blondel at the same time as the town hall, in a neoclassical French style. Built in Jaumont stone between 1761 and 1771, it has a two-storey facade: a ground floor with seven arches in the middle of the hangar and a noble floor decorated with seven French windows. Its forebody, surmounted by a carved pediment, represents a trophy of weapons composed of a breastplate, a panache helmet and a beam of weapons (draples, spears, cannons).

This monument is part of a larger urban project initiated by Marshal Charles Louis Auguste Fouquet de Belle-Isle, inspired by the ideas of the Enlightenment. From 1728, the latter undertook to modernize Metz by creating a central royal square near the cathedral, surrounded by public buildings. After two decades of negotiations with the local clergy and bourgeois, Blondel was responsible for creating the town hall and its annexes, including the guard corps, to house the soldiers watching the square.

Over the centuries, the building has experienced several assignments: savings bank in the 20th century, then district hotel, before hosting the municipal tourism office. Its facade and cover, classified as historical monuments since 1921, were restored in 2007 to erase the traces of pollution. The weapons trophy and neoclassical architecture bear witness to its original military role, while its location in front of the former Parliament underlines its importance in the city planning of the eighteenth century Messin.

Future

The building now houses the City's tourist office.

External links