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Building à Besançon dans le Doubs

Building

    67 Grande Rue
    25000 Besançon
Private property

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1728
Purchase of parcel
1739
Possible start of work
1758
Family annoyance
1769
Sale of the hotel
1963
Monument protection
années 1970
Partial destruction
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts on courtyards and corresponding roofs; stairway on courtyard (cad. I 569, 569p): entry by order of 19 July 1963

Key figures

Jacques-François Pourcheresse - Owner and sponsor Navy officer, anoblied in 1758.
Nicolas Nicole - Suspected architect Aura designed the hotel around 1739.
Désiré Richardot - Acquirer in 1769 Lord of Choisey, president of accounts.
Édouard Baille - 19th Century Painter Workshop installed in the attic.
Hugues-Melchior Morand - Former owner Sculptor, house bought in 1728.

Origin and history

The Pourcheresse de Fraisans hotel, located at 67 Grande-Rue in Besançon, is an 18th-century building built on an irregular plot. Originally, it consisted of a house on the street and another at the back of the courtyard, connected by a staircase with an open cage in masonry and frame, equipped with a railing in ironwork decorated with naval anchors. A stake occupied a second court. Today, only the house on the street, the staircase, the front façade of the main house and its left wing remain.

The hotel would have been built by architect Nicolas Nicole from 1739, on the site of the house of sculptor Hugues-Melchior Morand, acquired in 1728 by Jacques-François Pourcheresse. The latter, who came from an anobligated family in 1758, was a naval officer, which would explain the reasons for anchoring in the ironworks. In 1769 the house was sold to Désiré Richardot, seigneur of Choisey and president of the Besançon Chamber of Accounts.

In the 19th century, the studio of the painter Édouard Baille (1814-1888) occupied the attic of the house at the back of the courtyard. At the beginning of the 20th century, the façade of the house on the street was rebuilt. In the 1970s, the extension of a nearby department store led to the destruction of the annexes of the second court and the house in the back of the first court, retaining only its earlier façade. The protected elements (facades on courtyard, roofs and stairs) were listed in the Historical Monuments in 1963.

External links