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House à Limoges en Haute-Vienne

Haute-Vienne

House

    5 Rue d'Isly
    87000 Limoges

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1873
Construction of distillery
1885
Acquisition of a stationery
1963
Extension of offices
2012
Site assignment
4 février 2020
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

In total, the house Lacaux with the right-of-way of the garden located 6 impasse Saint-Exupéry on Parcel No. 176, shown in the cadastre section DT, as shown in red on the plan annexed to the decree: inscription by order of 4 February 2020

Key figures

Jules Lacaux - Co-founder of the distillery Sponsor of the house in 1873.
Charles Lacaux - Co-founder and industrial Diversified to stationery in 1885.

Origin and history

Lacaux House is an iconic building in Limoges, built in 1873 by Jules and Charles Lacaux to house their distillery. At the time, it produced bitter drinks and elixirs, including one based on coca, making it one of the most important in the city. The activity ceased after World War I, marking the end of this flourishing industrial period for the site.

In 1885, the Lacaux family turned to the stationery, acquiring a factory in Bosmie-l-Aiguille. The distillery was then converted into administrative offices for this new activity. In 1963 extensions were added, and in 1972 a second production unit was opened in Lisieux. The site remained the registered office until its disposal in 2012, threatened by a real estate project.

Saved by a court decision in 2013-2014, the building and its garden were finally listed as historic monuments on February 4, 2020. Its architecture, combining elements of the 16th-17th centuries (portal in basket cove, galleries with Corinthian columns) and traces of its industrial past, makes it a unique testimony to the economic and heritage history of Limoges.

The facade on street, remote after an alignment of 1775, hides an inner courtyard with three superimposed galleries. The wrought iron balustrades of the first two levels, adorned with volutes, contrast with the wooden upper gallery. These details, protected since 1974, underline the artistic value of the place, today preserved despite urban pressures.

External links