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Orsay Station (Museum of Orsay) à Paris 1er dans Paris 7ème

Patrimoine classé
Gare classée MH
Paris

Orsay Station (Museum of Orsay)

    7-9 Quai Anatole-France
    75007 Paris 7e Arrondissement
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay - Paris 7ème
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Gare dOrsay Musée dOrsay
Crédit photo : Cheng-en Cheng from Taichung City, Taiwan - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1898-1900
Construction of the station
14 juillet 1900
Inauguration
1939
Decline in traffic
1973
Historical classification
1978-1986
Transformation into a museum
1986
Opening of the museum
2021
Added name Giscard d'Estaing
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Victor Laloux - Architect Designer of the station in 1900.
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing - President of the Republic Initiator of the museum project.
Jean-Baptiste Hugues - Sculptor Author of the statue of Bordeaux.
Laurent Marqueste - Sculptor Author of the statue of Toulouse.
Gae Aulenti - Interior architect Interior transformation of the museum.

Origin and history

The Orsay station, built between 1898 and 1900 by architect Victor Laloux, was originally designed as a monumental terminus for the Paris-Orléans Railway Company. Inauguration at the Universal Exhibition of 1900, it welcomed visitors and foreign delegations, extending the railway lines to the heart of Paris. Its architecture combined a bold metallic window with an adorned stone trim, reflecting the French know-how of the time. Three monumental statues, representing Bordeaux, Toulouse and Nantes, decorated its facade, symbolizing the company's flagship destinations.

Since the 1920s, the station, which had become obsolete for modern trains, saw its traffic decline. Partially disused after 1939, it served as a yard during the Second World War and then as a transit point for prisoners of war in 1945. In the 1950s-1960s, it was reused as a humanitarian warehouse (operation by Abbé Pierre), cinema decor (including Le Procès d'Orson Welles), and ephemeral cultural space for the Renaud-Barrault theatre. Threatened by demolition in the 1970s, it was saved by its classification as a historical monument in 1978.

The station, transformed into a museum under the leadership of President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, became in 1986 the Musée d'Orsay, dedicated to the 19th century arts (1848-1914). Architects ACT Architecture (Bardon, Colboc, Philippon) and Gae Aulenti transformed its interior, preserving the central nave as a major axis of the museum journey. The museum completes the Louvre collections for this period, exhibiting paintings, sculptures, decorative arts and photographs. The underground station, reduced to four lanes, became a stop on the RER C in 1979, while the name Giscard d'Estaing was affixed to it in 2021.

The façade of the station bears the names of 18 formerly served destinations, including Bordeaux, Nantes and Toulouse. Its Terminus hotel, comprising 370 rooms, initially masked the machinery lobby. The vault caissons, richly decorated, were preserved thanks to the early electrification of the lines. Today, the site combines active railway heritage (RER station) and cultural heritage (museum), attracting millions of annual visitors.

The Musée d'Orsay includes works from the Louvre (post-1848) and the Musée national d'Art moderne (pre-1918), covering all currents, from realism to post-impressionism. Its architecture, combining industrial structure and academic ornaments, makes it a symbol of Parisian urban metamorphoses. The Senghor Bridge and the adjacent banks of the Seine underline its anchoring in the Parisian landscape.

Future

The President of the French Republic Valéry Giscard d'Estaing wanted to transform the building into a 19th-century art museum. In frontal competition with the Louvre Museum, rich in pictorial works from the 1st half of the 19th century, it is decided that the future Musée d'Orsay will be the extension and complement.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Téléphone : 01 40 49 48 14