Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

High House also known as Tour d'Ornex dans l'Ain

Ain

High House also known as Tour d'Ornex

    77 Rue de la Tour
    01210 Ornex
Crédit photo : Auteur inconnuUnknown author - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
2000
1415–1450
Initial construction
mai 2011
Purchase by Maxime Grenier
mars 2014
Historical monument classification
16 février 2018
Roof completion
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs (Box AO 150): inscription by decree of 17 March 2014

Key figures

Famille de Sergier (ou de Sergy) - Initial sponsors Vidomnes de Prévessin, builders of the tower.
Famille de Vibert - Subsequent owners Court clerks, heirs to the site.
Maxime Grenier - Owner of restaurant (2011–) Gexian Notary, oversees the work.

Origin and history

The high house of Ornex, also known as the Tower of Ornex, is a strong house built between 1415 and 1450 by the family of Sergier (or Sergy), vidomnes of Prévessin and residing in Ornex. This modest building, without a defensive system, organizes around a central tower with a quasi-square section, sometimes described as pentagonal due to an elbow on its southeast face. Originally, the ground floor housed a kitchen with a water stone (typical reservoir of Geneva's rural habitat), while the floor, accessible by a spiral staircase, housed a reception room with carved beams and box ceilings.

Later on, the tower became the heart of a small hamlet. During World War II, it was occasionally used as a prison by Germans occupying the Land of Gex. In 2011, the notary Maxime Grenier and his wife acquired the property and undertook a major restoration, supervised by the Architects des Bâtiments de France. The work, including the façade and roof (completed in February 2018), has preserved original elements such as the 15th century toothed brick frieze or the stone frames of the bays.

Ranked a historic monument in March 2014, the Ornex Tower is distinguished by its medieval civil architecture, mixing local influences (Genevoise water stone) and rare decorative details for a strong house. Its location near the Gex-Geneva axis, although discreet, highlights its historic role in the rural landscape of the Country of Gex. Today, the site remains a testimony of the seigneurial and judicial dynamics of the region between the Middle Ages and the modern era.

External links