Origin and history
The Hallwyll hotel is a Parisian mansion located at 28 rue Michel-le-Comte, in the 3rd arrondissement, in the heart of the Marais district. Built at the beginning of the 18th century for the widow of the Count of Bouligneux, it is profoundly renovated in the 3rd quarter of the 18th century by the architect Claude-Nicolas Ledoux. The latter, known for its neoclassical style, incorporates innovative elements such as an atrium with doric galleries and a trompe-l'oeil decor, making this hotel one of the most modern of its time. The hotel is also famous for being the birthplace of Germaine Necker, future Madame de Staël, in 1766, when renting the hotel by the bank Thellusson & Necker.
Originally, the hotel occupies the location of a medieval house that belonged to goldsmith Guillaume Villain. In the 18th century, he passed into the hands of several influential owners, including Marie Henriette Le Hardy du Fay, widow of Jacques Clément de La Palu, and his second husband, Nicolas François Demydorge. Their daughter, Marie Thérèse Nicole Demydorge, wife of François Joseph d'Hallwyl, inherits the building and entrusts Ledoux with its transformation. The works include a symmetrical facade in bosses, a Tuscan gate, and a landscaped garden with overturned urns foreshadowing the style of the Royal Saline d'Arc-et-Senans. The hotel, classified as a Historical Monument in 1976, now retains its facades, its interior staircase, and remains of its original decor.
The Hallwyll hotel illustrates the fascination of Parisian private hotels under Louis XVI, combining sober elegance and architectural innovations. After the Revolution, he changed hands several times, notably to Prince Esterházy in 1809, before being converted into a commercial space in the 19th century, losing some of his furniture and works of art. Recently restored, it has regained its portico and 18th century gardens, although it remains a private property not open to the public. Its atrium, ironworks, and bas-reliefs make it a unique testament to the art of Ledoux in Paris, in a neighbourhood marked by the financial and intellectual history of the capital.
The 1976 classification protects all the facades, roofs, stairs with its cage, as well as the floors of the courtyard and the old garden, including the remains of the original decoration. Among the remarkable elements are the monumental gate, the wrought ironworks, and the bas-reliefs under the entrance vault. The garden, designed as a closed space with doric columns and a trompe-l'oeil wall, reflects the ingenuity of Ledoux, which includes water games and a statue of Grace. Although transformed into a workshop in the 19th century, the hotel has retained enough elements to attest to its past prestige, linked to both aristocracy, finance, and the world of letters.
The hotel is also associated with major historical figures. Jacques Necker, financial director of Louis XVI and resident of the hotel from 1757 to 1766, saw his daughter, Germaine, future Madame de Staël, born there, a central figure in literary romanticism. François Joseph d'Hallwyl, camp marshal and colonel of the Swiss guards, and his wife, sponsored the work of Ledoux, marking the architectural climax of the building. After their death, their daughter, Marie Françoise Ursule d'Hallwyl, wife of Hungarian diplomat Valentin Ladislas d'Esterházy, sold the hotel in 1809, marking the beginning of its partial decline. Today, although not accessible, the hotel remains a symbol of Parisian heritage, served by the Rambuteau and Arts et Métiers metro stations.
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