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Building en Meurthe-et-Moselle

Meurthe-et-Moselle

Building

    9 Rue Saint Nicolas
    54000 Nancy
Crédit photo : Doique - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1797–1811
Property of Georges Mayer
milieu du XVIIIe siècle
Construction of building
début du XIXe siècle
Renovation of the façade
7 avril 1998
Classification of interior decorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

First floor apartment decorations (Box BE 131): inscription by order of 7 April 1998

Key figures

Georges Mayer l'aîné - Iron merchant Owner from 1797 to 1811.
Joseph Henry - Investigative judge Owner from 1815 to 1833.
Charles de Rosiers - Court Counsellor Owner after Joseph Henry.

Origin and history

The building on 9 rue Saint-Nicolas in Nancy, built in the middle of the eighteenth century, is part of the medieval route of the old road linking Nancy to Saint-Nicolas-de-Port. Although its façade, reworked in the early 19th century, goes unnoticed, its entrance hall houses a wrought iron staircase decorated with rock motifs, leading to one of the best preserved 18th century interiors of the city. This building illustrates Nancy's urban evolution, where the houses of the Enlightenment often eclipsed medieval remains.

On the first floor, a square vestibule distributes an apartment whose rooms have preserved their original parquet floors, panelling and fireplaces, typical of the Louis XV style. The painted mists, representing gallant scenes in greyish and yellow shades, as well as the mouldings of the panellings, bear witness to an exceptional craft. The first traces of property date back to Georges Mayer the Elder, an iron merchant (1797–11), followed by Joseph Henry, an investigating judge, and Charles de Rosiers, a court councillor (1815–33).

The interior decorations of the apartment, classified as Historic Monument in 1998, contrast with the discretion of the facade. Saint-Nicolas Street, bordered by dated buildings (such as n°2 of 1738 or n°8 of 1776), offers a panorama of the 18th century architecture of the Nemenca, where the exteriors were often privileged in heritage protections. This building thus reveals the importance of the interiors, often unknown, in the heritage of the Enlightenment in Lorraine.

External links