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Hotels in Roubaix dans le Nord

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Nord

Hotels in Roubaix

    62 Boulevard du Général-de-Gaulle
    59100 Roubaix
Autres Hôtel particuliers à Roubaix
Hôtels particuliers Boulevard du Général-de-Gaulle à Roubaix
Hôtels particuliers Boulevard du Général-de-Gaulle à Roubaix
Crédit photo : Pymouss - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Époque contemporaine
2000
4e quart du XIXe siècle
Construction of hotels
12 août 1998
Registration historical monument
18 décembre 1998
Supplementary registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façade and roof on street (Box KO 94): inscription by decree of 18 December 1998

Key figures

Achille Edouard Dupire-Rozan - Architect Manufacturer of several private hotels.
Auguste Dupire-Deschamps - Architect Collaborator on boulevard projects.

Origin and history

The private hotels of the boulevard du Général-de-Gaulle in Roubaix constitute a homogeneous and symmetrical architectural ensemble, built during the last quarter of the 19th century. These 17 facades, divided between numbers 52 and 88 (with the exception of 80 and 82, which were considered too altered), bordered the old boulevard de Paris, a major artery linking peri-urban neighbourhoods to the city centre. This boulevard, plotted on the location of the Roubaix Canal, was then one of the city's most prestigious addresses, reserved for bourgeois and industrial families. The hotels, often designed by architects Achille Edouard Dupire-Rozan and Auguste Dupire-Deschamps, have a marked decorative richness, blending Renaissance motifs and revisited classicism, with pediments, skylights, cartridges and carved shellboards.

The stylistic unit of these facades reflects a desire for ostentation, characteristic of the eclectic style in vogue in the North of France at that time. These residences, registered as historical monuments since 1998 for some (such as n°58), testify to the economic prosperity of Roubaix, then textile capital, and the social rise of its industrial elites. Their uniform row layout, despite variations in detail, highlights ambitious urban planning, where architecture served as both a social marker and a showcase for economic success.

Heritage protection mainly concerns facades and roofs on street, such as that of 66 boulevard du Général-de-Gaulle, classified by order of 12 August 1998. These private hotels, by their concentration and consistency, offer a rare example of bourgeois urbanism in the late 19th century, where architectural luxury met a logic of representation and distinction. Their preservation makes it possible today to understand the evolution of Roubaix, from a dynamic industrial city to a territory marked by its heritage heritage.

External links