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All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Buildings à Metz en Moselle

Buildings

    6 Place du Roi George
    57000 Metz
Ownership of a private company
Crédit photo : Ga5775 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Époque contemporaine
2000
19 décembre 1986
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs, including the gate on the rue du Coëtlosquet, excluding the glass roof and the part of the roofs corresponding to the west-facing façade of the South Court; porch on the Rue des Trois-Boulangers, opening onto courtyard and stairway 1; two stairs 1 and 2 in full; the following rooms, with their decorations, located on the first floor of the two buildings and designated in the south-north direction: large room A, with the corners folded in cut strip, on rue des Trois-Boulangers; small round living room B and anteroom C with cushioned angles, both communicating with stairway 2 ; large living room, known as the D Music Lounge, as well as the large round living room E and the adjacent room F, both communicating with the music lounge (cad. 29 3, 4) : entry by order of 19 December 1986

Origin and history

The buildings in Metz, at 3 and 3bis rue du Coëtlosquet and 4 rue des Trois-Boulangers, constitute an architectural complex protected by their heritage value. These buildings, including facades, roofs and certain interior elements (such as decorated staircases and lounges) were inscribed in the Historical Monuments by order of 19 December 1986, illustrate a preserved urban heritage. Their exact location, although documented in the Merimée base, remains subject to a geographical accuracy considered "passable" (note 5/10), with an approximate GPS address indicating King George's Square.

The protected elements include specific architectural details, such as the gate on the rue du Coëtlosquet, two stairs in total, as well as rooms on the first floor with neat decors, such as the large music salon or the round lounge. These buildings, now owned by a private company, bear witness to a past in which civil architecture played a central role in the social and cultural organisation of cities. Their protection reflects the importance attached to the conservation of emblematic urban spaces, even in the absence of accurate data on their construction or sponsor.

No information is available on their construction period, initial use or associated historical characters. Their current status (open to visit, rented for events, or converted into guest rooms) is also not specified in the sources consulted. These buildings thus remain silent witnesses of a time when Metz, in Lorraine (now Greater East), affirmed itself as a cultural and economic crossroads, without their specific history being clearly documented.

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