Construction of the villa 1860 (≈ 1860)
Built by Henri Labrouste for Thuret.
25 mai 1976
Registration for historical monuments
Registration for historical monuments 25 mai 1976 (≈ 1976)
Front and roof protected.
1988
Restoration and elevation
Restoration and elevation 1988 (≈ 1988)
Raised by nearly 2 meters.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Façade et Roof sur rue (cad. H 52): inscription by order of 25 May 1976
Key figures
François-Armand Thouret - Sponsor and owner
Detective of Labrouste, annuitant from Paris.
Henri Labrouste - Architect
Designer of the villa in 1860.
Origin and history
The Thouret Hotel is a neoclassical mansion built in 1860 on Bourdon Boulevard in Neuilly-sur-Seine. It was built for François-Armand Thouret (1813-1889), inspector of Henri Labrouste on a construction site, and annuitant resident of rue Vivienne in Paris. The villa, inspired by the Italian Renaissance, consists of a ground floor, a noble floor and an attic, with a Tuscan entrance porch.
The façade and the roof on the street were listed as historical monuments on 25 May 1976. Originally, the villa had remarkable elements such as a billiard room illuminated by a glass window, a winter garden, and a bathroom on the ground floor. Very modified over time, it experienced an elevation of nearly 2 metres in 1988.
The Thouret Hotel is now owned by a private company. Its architecture, although partially masked by subsequent transformations, remains a testament to the neoclassical style applied to 19th-century bourgeois residences in Île-de-France. The villa is referenced in the Mérimée base under the code INSEE 92051, in the Hauts-de-Seine.
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