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Hotel Cassini or Pecci-Blunt à Paris 1er dans Paris 7ème

Patrimoine classé
Hotel particulier classé

Hotel Cassini or Pecci-Blunt

    32 Rue de Babylone
    75007 Paris 7e Arrondissement
State ownership
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Hôtel Cassini ou Pecci-Blunt
Crédit photo : Celette - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1768
Initial construction
1790
Death of the Marquis of Cassini
1863
Reconstruction by the Countess of Talleyrand
1919
Buy by Cecil Blunt
1974
Acquisition by the State
1993-1995
Historic Monument Protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs on street, courtyard and garden (excluding the 1963 building in the backyard); ground of the parcel; rooms 23, 16 and 15 on both sides of the large oval lounge (Box 07: 01 AJ 12): inscription by order of 17 June 1993. Large oval living room overlooking the garden; former dining room called marble hall, on the ground floor (cad. 07:01 AJ 12): classification by decree of 10 July 1995

Key figures

Dominique-Joseph de Cassini - Marquis and original sponsor Son of Jacques Cassini, military.
Claude Billard de Bélisard - 18th century architect Designer of the original hotel.
Suzanne de Talleyrand-Périgord - Countess, owner in 1863 Have the hotel rebuilt.
Jean-Jacques Arveuf-Fransquin - Architect of the Second Empire Turns the hotel into Louis XVI style.
Cecil Blunt - American Owner (1919) Restore the hotel with his wife.
Jacques Gréber - Landscape architect Restore the gardens in 1920.

Origin and history

The Hotel de Cassini, also known as Hotel Pecci-Blunt, is a Parisian mansion built in 1768 by the architect Claude Billard de Bélisard for the Marquis Dominique-Joseph de Cassini, a member of the famous family of astronomers. The original project, preserved at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, provided for a sober building with a ground floor surmounted by an attic. After the death of the Marquis in 1790, the hotel changed owners several times, including General Caffarelli, aide de camp de Napoleon I, and Baron de La Rochefoucauld.

In 1863 Countess Suzanne de Talleyrand-Périgord, forced to leave her hotel in Monville destroyed by Haussmannian works, acquired the hotel of Cassini. It was rebuilt in Louis XVI style by the architect Jean-Jacques Arveuf-Francsquin, who included woodwork from the former hotel in Monville, designed by Étienne-Louis Boullée. The hotel then passes to their daughter, then to their grandchildren, who sell it in 1919.

The hotel was purchased in 1919 by Cecil Blunt, an American heir married to Anna Laetitia Pecci, grand niece of Pope Leo XIII. The couple restored it and redesigned the gardens with architect Jacques Gréber, meubling it in the Art Deco style by Jean-Michel Frank. After 1948, the hotel became a missionary residence and was acquired by the State in 1974 to house the Prime Minister's services, including the National Intelligence Technology Control Commission (CNCTR).

The hotel's architecture, organized between courtyard and garden, includes a rotunda decorated with 18th-century woodwork and a marble room decorated with griotte marble. The 5,000 m2 garden, adjacent to the Matignon hotel, houses a fountain carved by Henri-Léon Gréber. Some parts of the hotel, including the large oval lounge and the Marble Hall, have been listed or listed as historical monuments since 1993 and 1995.

Today, the Cassini Hotel hosts government offices, including those of the Interministerial Delegation to the Olympic and Paralympic Games (DIJOP). Its history reflects the architectural and social transformations of Paris, from the Enlightenment to the contemporary era, through the Second Empire and the crazy years.

External links