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Notre-Dame du Léman Church en Haute-Savoie

Notre-Dame du Léman Church

    13 Route d'Evian
    74200 Thonon-les-Bains

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1er mai 1933
First pick-up
2 juillet 1933
Laying the first stone
1933-1935
Construction of church
10 juin 1935
Solemn Blessing
14 juin 1936
Blessing of bells
11 novembre 1936
Blessing of great organs
23 avril 1946
Church Consecration
janvier 1990
Structural fire
12 juin 2011
Celebration of 75 years
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Maurice Novarina - Savoyard architect Church designer, first realization.
Père Ambroise Firmin - Cure Builder Initiator of the project with Oblates.
Monseigneur Florent du Bois de la Villerabel - Bishop of Annecy Blessed the church in 1935.
Monseigneur Auguste Cesbron - Bishop of Annecy Consecrated the church in 1946.
J.C Mauméjean - Mosaic Author of the giant mosaic of the choir.
Marcel Feuillat - Geneva sculptor Creator of the bronze tabernacle.
Charles Anthonioz - Marbling Author of the marble altar of Siena.
Pape Pie XI - Supreme Pontiff Arms present in the church.

Origin and history

The Notre-Dame du Léman church was built between 1933 and 1935 in Vongy, a hamlet of Thonon-les-Bains, to replace a chapel that had become too small. Initiated by the Oblates of Saint Francis de Sales and their parish priest, Father Ambroise Firmin, the project is entrusted to Savoyard architect Maurice Novarina, then 26 years old. It will be his first religious achievement. The land was offered by a parishioner, and the works symbolically began on 1 May 1933, with the laying of the first stone on 2 July. The church was blessed on 10 June 1935 and consecrated in 1946, marking a post-Law architectural renewal of 1905.

The church's design combines modernity and symbolism: an oak frame in the shape of an overturned boat hull, a 45-metre bell tower visible from Lake Geneva, and an innovative concrete facade with a triangular claustra. Local materials (blue stone of the Allinges, brown tiles) combine with bold decorative elements, such as a diamond window in Chartres and Bourges colours. The interior, inspired by the precepts of the Arts & Crafts movement, is dominated by gold and blue, with a giant mosaic depicting the Virgin and Child Jesus on a boat of the Genevan, surrounded by Savoyard saints.

The church houses a Schwenkedel organ blessed in 1936, saved from a fire in 1990 which destroyed part of the structure, rebuilt in identical way under the direction of Novarina. The three bells, melted by the Paccard Workshops of Annecy, bear the coat of arms of Pope Pius XI and the Oblates. Their blessing in 1936, like that of stained glass windows and the Way of the Musaic Cross evoking the cities of Lemanics, underscores the link between spirituality and territory. Labeled "the 20th century heritage", the church celebrates its 75th anniversary in 2011 as an anchor in local memory.

The interior decoration, of a rare symbolic richness, includes mosaics signed Mauméjean, a silver bronze tabernacle representing a Byzantine Virgin, and stained glass windows dedicated to regional trades (winemakers, fishermen, workers). The Baptistery, adorned with biblical scenes such as Moses making water spring, and the white stone chancel of Dijon highlight the community dimension of the building. The coat of arms of Pope Pius XI and the Swiss city of Châtel-Saint-Denis, present in the transept, recall the transborder ties of the Leman.

The history of Notre-Dame du Léman is also that of a changing community: the modest village of Vongy, now a district of Thonon-les-Bains, sees its church dedicated to "love of the poor". The Oblates, as missionary orders, played a central role, as reflected in Father Baduchelli's fresco in the Baptistery. The fire of 1990, followed by a faithful reconstruction, reinforces its status as a local symbol, between religious and architectural heritage.

External links