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Building en Meurthe-et-Moselle

Meurthe-et-Moselle

Building

    9BIS Rue des Sœurs Macarons
    54000 Nancy
Immeuble
Immeuble
Immeuble
Immeuble
Immeuble
Crédit photo : Doique - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1722
Procurement of land
1725
Construction of building
1794
Revolutionary sale
XIXe siècle
Development of confectionery
1889
Creation of stained glass
1987
Partial protection
2020
Back from the window
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs on street and courtyard; the large staircase with its cage and wrought iron ramp; both ovens and fireplace located in the courtyard room on the ground floor (Box BC 240): inscription by order of 19 May 1987

Key figures

Antoine Grisot de Bellecroix - Sponsor and first owner Treasurer of Lorraine, built the building in 1725.
Jean-Nicolas Jennesson - Architect Designs the building and church of Saint Sebastian in Nancy.
Élisabeth Morlot - Religious refugee Legendary initiator of Nancy's macarons during the Revolution.
Ferdinand Gounon - Glass artist Author of the 1889 stained glass window representing a nun.
Georges Aptel - Last confectioner Stop making macarons in the 1980s.

Origin and history

The building, located at 10 rue des Sœurs Macarons in Nancy, was built in 1725 by architect Jean-Nicolas Jennesson for Antoine Grisot de Bellecroix, treasurer of Lorraine. The latter, who had owned the land since 1722, placed his initials (A and G) on the wrought iron gate of the entrance, topped by a crown that had now disappeared. The house, adjacent to another hotel built by Grisot, passed into several hands after the Revolution, notably that of the Vallet family in 1794, then of the Mullers in the early 19th century.

According to tradition, nuns expelled from their convent during the Revolution took refuge in this building and made the first macaroons of Nancy, giving his name to the house. Although large scale artisanal production is unlikely (the original oven, still visible, is too small), this legend persists. In the 19th century, the confectionery workshop was installed on the ground floor, with a street shop and ovens on courtyard, near a well today closed.

The house retains remarkable elements such as a wrought iron staircase, two historic furnaces and a stained glass window of 1889 representing a nun, classified in the Supplementary Inventory of Historic Monuments since 2021. Partially protected since 1987 (façades, roofs, staircases, ovens), it illustrates Nancy's architectural and artisanal evolution, between 18th century aristocratic heritage and subsequent commercial activity. The macaron production ceased in the 1980s, but the original window, after an exile on Gambetta Street, was resettled in 2020.

The building, divided into apartments in the 1980s, remains a testimony to the history of Lorraine, mixing religious heritage, civil architecture and culinary tradition. Its L-shaped plan, its interior courtyard and its 19th century interior decorations (ceilings, fireplaces) reflect the successive adaptations of the building, while preserving its original character.

External links