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Hotel de Brueys in Nîmes dans le Gard

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Gard

Hotel de Brueys in Nîmes

    3 Rue Dorée
    30000 Nîmes
Hôtel de Brueys à Nîmes
Hôtel de Brueys à Nîmes
Hôtel de Brueys à Nîmes
Crédit photo : Nom (Meyer Christian) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1620
Sale to the Fabrique family
1717
Gallery vaulted
XVIIe siècle
Initial construction
1779
Major reconstruction
1781
Family facilities André
1964
First protection
2012
Total classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The entire hotel (Box EY 491): registration by order of 25 June 2012

Key figures

Famille d’Aubais - Former owner First noble family associated with the hotel.
Famille de Fabrique - Owner (1620–XVIIIe) Also owned Rodilhan Castle.
Famille André - Owner (late 18th) Head of the 1781s.

Origin and history

The Hotel de Brueys, also known as the Hotel André or Hotel d'Aubais, is an emblematic civil building of Nîmes, built in the seventeenth century and almost entirely rebuilt in 1779. It preserves some remains of the earlier buildings, including a vaulted gallery dating back to 1717. The Aubais family owned it before it was sold in 1620 to Fabrique's family, who kept it for more than 150 years. In 1781, the André family made major improvements, such as the façade balanced by two lateral forebodys and a peristyle with Tuscan columns.

The hotel's architectural composition is marked by a vaulted vestibule, doors adorned with garlands, and a wrought iron ramp staircase with geometrical and volute motifs. The enfilade apartments, still intact, retain their original decorations. Partly listed in 1964, it was fully classified as a historic monument in 2012, highlighting its heritage importance in the historic centre of Nîmes.

Located at 3 Dorée Street, the hotel illustrates the evolution of Nîmes private hotels, mixing 17th century heritage and neoclassical transformations of the 18th century. Its Tuscan portico, its twin columns and its carved stairwell make it a rare testimony to the civil architecture of the time. The archives also mention its connection to the castle of Rodilhan, property of the Fabrique family, but no vestige of the sixteenth century is now visible.

Sources, including Mérimée records and guides such as the Blue Guides (1988), confirm its status as a protected monument and its partial openness to the public. Its history reflects the social dynamics of Nîmes, where aristocratic or bourgeois families marked their prestige by sumptuous urban residences, often rebuilt to follow architectural modes.

External links