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Former hospital à Rivières dans le Gard

Gard

Former hospital

    2 Chemin du Moulin
    30430 Rivières

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1699
Purchase of Picon House
1714
Start of work
1717
Completion of work
1792
Departure of nuns
1833
Improvement work
1962
Decommissioning
8 juillet 2009
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The entire old hospital, with its enclosures and fence walls (cad. A 431, 1449): registration by order of 8 July 2009

Key figures

Marquise de Portes - Patron The hospital was completed.
Guillaume Rollin - Architect Designs initial plans.
Architecte Cazal - Renovator Modified the hospital in 1833.

Origin and history

The former hospital of Rivières, located in the village of Rivières (formerly Rivières-de-Theyrargues) in the Gard, was built in the first quarter of the eighteenth century. It illustrates the model of small rural hospitals created under the impetus of Louis XIV, as general hospitals developed in large cities. Its architecture, designed by Guillaume Rollin, reflects a typical organization: a central courtyard, wings in return, and an integrated chapel for the sick and nuns.

The building began in 1714 with the wing of the chapel, thanks to the patronage of the Marquise de Portes, Viscountess of Theyrargues. Although the chapel underwent transformations in the 19th century, the whole today retains most of its original arrangements. The hospital, decommissioned in 1962, was listed as a historical monument in 2009, but its state of ruin in 2012 underlined the urgency of its preservation.

Originally, the hospital occupied a house purchased in 1699 (the Picon house), redeveloped to include a central chapel and patient rooms on both sides. The nuns left the site in 1792, and the establishment lost its income before gradually resuming its activities. In the 19th century, schools were installed in the northern part, and works conducted in 1833 by the architect Cazal partially altered its appearance.

The building consists of a main house body on one floor, with a pilaster-framed door and a curvilinear cornice. Inside, a corridor connects the old house and serves rooms opening onto the garden. Despite its abandonment, the hospital remains a major architectural and historical testimony of rural medical assistance in Occitanie.

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