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Hotel Lyautey de Genevreuille in Vesoul en Haute-Saône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Haute-Saône

Hotel Lyautey de Genevreuille in Vesoul

    12 Rue Salengro
    70000 Vesoul
Hôtel Lyautey de Genevreuille à Vesoul
Hôtel Lyautey de Genevreuille à Vesoul
Hôtel Lyautey de Genevreuille à Vesoul
Hôtel Lyautey de Genevreuille à Vesoul
Crédit photo : Remi Mathis - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
vers 1760
Construction of hotel
1er mars 1882
Death of Charles Dodelier
5 février 2009
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The entire hotel, including the courtyard and the garden (Box B 423): registration by order of 5 February 2009

Key figures

Charles Dodelier - Architect Died in the hotel in 1882.

Origin and history

The Hotel Lyautey de Genevreuille is a private hotel built around 1760 in the Old Vesoul district, 12 rue Salengro (formerly Roger-Salengro Street). Its U-shaped plan is organized around a courtyard closed by a wall surmounted by wrought iron grids, and a garden housing a 19th century painted pavilion. The building, in coated bellows, preserves notable architectural elements such as a stone staircase with wrought iron railings, as well as rooms on the ground floor decorated with 18th century decorations. The communes, located at the bottom of a second court, complete the whole.

The hotel is associated with architect Charles Dodelier, who died on 1 March 1882. The building, including its courtyard and garden, was listed as historic monuments by order of 5 February 2009, thereby recognizing its heritage value. The Mérimée base is listed under the number PA70000092, and its official address is confirmed as 12 rue Roger-Salengro, 7000 Vesoul, in the department of Haute-Saône (code Insee 70550).

The hotel's architecture reflects the codes of 18th century private hotels, combining functionality (courtyard, garden, commons) and aesthetics (indoor decors, ironworks). Its state of conservation, especially for the elements of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, makes it a rare testimony of the bourgeois habitation of this period in Franche-Comté. The Creative Commons license for some photos (such as Rémi Mathis) facilitates its digital broadcasting, while its location in the city centre makes it a key element of the Vesulian heritage.

External links