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Hotel de Francheville in Vannes dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Morbihan

Hotel de Francheville in Vannes

    Place du Poids-Public
    56000 Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Hôtel de Francheville à Vannes
Crédit photo : Fab5669 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1665
Acquisition by Julien Mynier
1667-1677
Reconstruction work
1675-1689
Exil of the Parliament of Brittany
1er quart XVIIe siècle
Presumed initial construction
25 janvier 1929
First MH protection
2001
Peril order
27 juillet 2016
Extension of MH protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs as well as the stairwell of the former hotel (cad. BS 76): inscription by order of 27 July 2016

Key figures

Julien Mynier - Trader and Owner Buyer in 1665, sponsor of the works.
François Le Meilleur - Former owner Sell the house to Mynier in 1665.
Jean Alquier, sieur de Mézerac - Owner in the 18th century Possible responsible for changes south façade.
Alfred Charron - Architect (1927) Partial modernization of the façade.
Laurent Le Ray et François Cosnier - Experts (1666) Evaluation of reconstruction work.

Origin and history

The Mynier Hotel, also known as the Francheville Hotel, is a private hotel located in Vannes, at the corner of Place des Lices and Place du Poit-Public. Built in tuffeau and granite, it originally dates from the 1st quarter of the 17th century, although later sources evoke a construction in the second half of the 17th century (ca. 1667-1677). His name comes from Julien Mynier, a 17th-century valve merchant, who acquired it in 1665 to build it partially on the site of a medieval house made of wood. The building preserves traces of this ancient period, such as a 15th-century fireplace and a dripper wall with an ogival bay.

The hotel is closely linked to Breton political history: it was built during the exile of the British Parliament in Vannes (1675-1689), reflecting the administrative importance of the city at that time. Its architecture combines facades with spans quadrilled by granite and limestone bands, skylights adorned with pediments, and a pentagonal scallop resting on trunks decorated with scallop shells. This scald, symbol of prestige, offers a view of the two adjacent places. The archives reveal that Julien Mynier began major works in 1667, including the demolition of the rear parts to enlarge the house to the north.

The hotel has been listed as a Historic Monument since 1929 for its scald and roof, then extended in 2016 to its facades and stairwell, and has suffered structural weaknesses since the 1920s. Consolidation work was carried out in the 1950s (concrete strap under the scauguette) and in 2013 (foundations and work), following a peril order in 2001. Recent restorations have revealed medieval elements, such as traces of primitive corbellation on the southern facade. The building changed several times from the families Le Meilleur (17th century) to Alquier de Mézerac (18th century), then to traders in the 19th and 20th centuries.

The archives also mention an aborted project to modernize the east façade in 1927 by architect Alfred Charron, partially realized. The last major intervention dates back to 1978, with a concrete consolidation of the chopstick. Today, the hotel bears witness to the architectural and social evolutions of Vannes, between medieval heritage, classical prestige, and contemporary adaptations.

External links