First protection under Historic Monuments 17 mai 2013 (≈ 2013)
Registration of facades and common areas.
29 juillet 2013
Amendment of the protection order
Amendment of the protection order 29 juillet 2013 (≈ 2013)
Clarification of the protected elements.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
2e quart XXe siècle
Construction of building
Construction of building 2e quart XXe siècle (≈ 2037)
Period of construction of the modernist building.
Heritage classified
The facades and roofs, as well as the common areas (cf. AY 0014, cf. plan annexed to the Order): registration by order of 17 May 2013, as amended by order of 29 July 2013
Key figures
Jean-Marie Pelée de Saint-Maurice - Architect
Designer of the modernist building.
Barillet - Verrier (workshop)
Suspected author of stained glass.
Origin and history
The building at 21 rue Gazan in the 14th arrondissement of Paris is an emblematic example of modernist architecture of the 2nd quarter of the 20th century. Designed to reconcile housing and artist's workshops, it is distinguished by its checkered facade, rhythmic by large windows, and a staircase cage illuminated by stained glass windows attributed to the Barillet workshop. The ironwork of the entrance door, taken from the common areas, reinforces the stylistic unit of the whole.
This building is part of the tradition of "workshop-houses" buildings, popularized by architects such as Michel Roux-Spitz. It reflects a period when Paris attracted many artists in search of spaces adapted to their dual creative and residential life. The elements protected by decree in 2013 (façades, roofs, common areas) underline its heritage value, while the architect Jean-Marie Pelée de Saint-Maurice and the glassmaker Barillet left their mark there.
The location at the corner of Gazan Street, although documented, enjoys a geographical accuracy deemed mediocre (note 5/10), according to the Merimée data. The building, still visible today, illustrates the evolution of the urban and artistic needs of the inter-war period, while embodying the aesthetic renewal of the modernist movement in France.
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