Initial construction 1517 (≈ 1517)
Building with wheat hall and stove of the bourgeois.
1728
Edile House
Edile House 1728 (≈ 1728)
Becomes a meeting place for magistrates.
1789
Conversion to Town Hall
Conversion to Town Hall 1789 (≈ 1789)
Current assignment after the Revolution.
25 mai 1999
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 25 mai 1999 (≈ 1999)
Registration of facades and roof.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Façades and Roofing (Box 1 75): Registration by Order of 25 May 1999
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
The source text does not mention any named historical actor.
Origin and history
The Hunawihr Town Hall, built in 1517 as evidenced by the armorial stone of its southern gable wall, was originally designed to house the wheat hall on the ground floor and the stove of the bourgeois (common room reserved for the affluent inhabitants) on the floor. Its architecture reflects this dual vocation: an elevated ground floor, ground-lined windows, and a sandstone campanile topped by a hooked arrow. The coat of arms in relief and painted, as well as the engraved shields (including an illegible), underline its status as a major public building since the 16th century.
In 1728 the building became the house of the ediles (Herrenstube), a meeting place for local magistrates, before being transformed into a town hall after the French Revolution in 1789. In spite of changes in the 19th and 20th centuries — notably the modeling of windows and the interior distribution — it retains its traditional structure and its original appearance. The entrance door, in a broken arch with a moulure chambranle, remains a characteristic element, just like the sprocket walls pierced with sled windows and an oculus under the top.
Ranked a historic monument in 1999 for its facades and roof, the town hall illustrates the evolution of communal institutions in Alsace. Its history materializes the transition from an economic and social space (hall and stove) to a symbol of municipal power. Subsequent transformations, such as the addition of a staircase in the 19th century, did not alter its medieval silhouette, preserved despite successive uses.
The location of the building at 1 rue de la Mairie, in a wine village in Haut-Rhin, reinforces its anchoring in the local heritage. The coat of arms and the date of 1517, engraved on the facade, recall its central role in community life for more than five centuries, while its sandstone campanile remains a distinctive visual marker of the Alsatian landscape.
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