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Former departmental railway station à Saint-Brieuc en Côtes-d'Armor

Côtes-dArmor

Former departmental railway station

    1 Boulevard Waldeck Rousseau
    22000 Saint-Brieuc
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Ancienne gare ferroviaire départementale
Crédit photo : Markus Giger - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1902-1905
Construction of the station
31 décembre 1956
Network closure
1995
Reconversion by David Cras
3 mars 2014
Registration for historical monuments
2024
Short food project
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The remaining parts, namely: the vaults and roofs of the central hall, the gable wall of the east building, the facades and roofs of the west building (excludes therefore contemporary buildings and developments related to the current use of the building) (Box BE 22, 296): inscription by order of 3 March 2014

Key figures

Louis Harel de la Noë - Design engineer Designed the station and its innovative vaults.
David Cras - Architect of conversion Directed the 1995 work.

Origin and history

The Saint-Brieuc-Centerale railway station, built between 1902 and 1905, was the nerve centre of the departmental network of the Côtes-du-Nord Railways. Designed by engineer Louis Harel de la Noë, it was distinguished by its hall covered with eight parabolic arches of reinforced concrete, an innovative technique for the time. Four railway lines left: Plouha, Le Phare, Moncontour and the West Railway Station. The Marquise housed four lanes, while a side building served both as a passenger station and as an administrative centre for the entire network.

When it closed on 31 December 1956, the station was converted to a bus station and then to a university restaurant from 1999 to 2021. In 2014, its most remarkable elements – vaults, roofs of the central hall, east gable wall and facades of the west building – were listed as historical monuments. The architect David Cras supervised his conversion in 1995, thus preserving part of the Breton industrial heritage. In 2024, a short food project, led by the promoter Bleu Mercure, was selected to revive this emblematic place.

The station embodies the golden age of the departmental railways, marking the climax of a network designed to open up the rural areas of Brittany. Its architecture, combining functionality and aesthetics, bears witness to the technical audacity of Louis Harel de la Noë, pioneer of reinforced concrete. The preservation of the hall, with its characteristic parabolic arch, underscores the heritage importance of this building, a symbol of a time when the train was structuring the economic and social life of the region.

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