Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Hotel d'Uston in Montpellier dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Hérault

Hotel d'Uston in Montpellier

    3 Rue Fournarié
    34000 Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Hôtel dUston à Montpellier
Crédit photo : Auregann - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
XVIIIe siècle
Initial construction
XIXe siècle
Major renovations
18 octobre 1944
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades sur rue et sur cour et couverture du bâtiment d'entrée : inscription par decree du 18 octobre 1944

Key figures

Antoine Samuel Bonnier d'Alco - President of the Court of Aid First owner and designer of the hotel.
Famille d'Uston de Villeréglan - Subsequent owners Gives his current name to the hotel.

Origin and history

The Hotel d'Uston is an iconic mansion in Montpellier, built in the 18th century. It was originally built by Antoine Samuel Bonnier d'Alco, president of the Montpellier Aid Court, before becoming the property of the family of Uston de Villereglan. Its architecture reflects the aesthetic codes of the time, with a French composition adapted to local urban constraints, including a lateral rather than posterior garden.

The building underwent modifications in the 19th century, including a recasting of the bottom body in the form of a portico and an interior redistribution. Partly built on the foundations of the former hotel in Solas, acquired by Bonnier d'Alco, it illustrates the evolution of Montpellieran private hotels. Since 1944, its facades on street and courtyard, as well as its cover, have been protected as historical monuments.

Today, the Hotel d'Uston remains an architectural testimony of the Enlightenment century in Montpellier, mixing judicial heritage — through its first owner, magistrate — and family heritage. Its official inscription underlines its importance in the city's urban and historical landscape, although its contemporary uses (visits, events) are not specified in the available sources.

External links