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Boegler building in Baldenheim dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Immeuble
Maison à pan de bois
Bas-Rhin

Boegler building in Baldenheim

    4 Rue Principale
    67600 Baldenheim
Immeuble Boegler à Baldenheim
Immeuble Boegler à Baldenheim
Crédit photo : © Ralph Hammann - Wikimedia Commons - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1773
Construction of secondary housing
1785
Home extension
1830
First cadastre
1929
Historical monument classification
1942
Architectural records
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades, roof and entrance door on street: classification by order of 28 October 1929

Key figures

F.E.F / A.M.M - Owners (1773 and 1785) Initials engraved on poles and keys
L.F / V.B - Owners or artisans (XVIII century) Initials on carriage door medallion

Origin and history

The Boegler building is a 17th century farm in Baldenheim, Lower Rhine. Ranked a historic monument in 1929, it adopts a plan in a discontinuous U around a closed courtyard, with a log house, a secondary dwelling, a hangar and a barn. The house, with a square floor and a corbelled loggia, features typical architectural elements such as thick horn posts, ground sandstones and wooden chambranles. An extension, dated 1785, includes a stable and a barn on the ground floor.

The secondary unit, built in 1773 according to the inscriptions, has a semi-entered basement and a dance hall floor, accessible by an outdoor staircase. The carriage door, decorated with an oval medallion with L.F/V.B initials, and the pedestrian door in pink sandstone reflect a decorative care. The whole, initially larger ( stables, pigs, orchards), underwent transformations in the 19th and 20th centuries, including a recovery in coated masonry. Rehabilitation work is currently under way.

The building appears on the cadastral of 1830, but without the current barn. The 1942 surveys, carried out under the German occupation, mention extinct outbuildings (dung manure, apiary, vegetable garden). The architecture, mixing half croup, coffer in corbellation and turned balusters, suggests a construction between the late 17th and the first half of the 18th century. The site housed a hostel (Au Cerf) and then a butcher shop, illustrating its versatile use over the centuries.

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