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Buildings N° 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens in Paris à Paris 1er dans Paris 16ème

Patrimoine classé
Immeuble
Maison d'architecte
Paris

Buildings N° 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens in Paris

    12 Rue Mallet-Stevens
    75016 Paris 16e Arrondissement
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Immeubles N 1-12 Rue Mallet-Stevens à Paris
Crédit photo : MOSSOT sur Wikipédia français - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1926-1927
Street construction
20 juillet 1927
Official Inauguration
13 octobre 1942
Family arrest Allatini
1975
First partial protection
1990
Home-workshop ranking Martel
17 octobre 2000
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs of the former guardhouse (excluding extension) , as well as the floor of the plot, sis 1, rue Mallet-Stevens and 2, impasse AH 16 (cad. 16-01 BT 81); facades and roofs (excluding elevations) , as well as the floor of the cadastral plot of the building sis 3-5, rue Mallet-Stevens (cad. 16-01 BT 20); façades and roofs (excluding elevations) , the entrance hall, the staircase serving the original floors and the elevator, as well as the floor of the cadastral parcel of the building sis 4-6, rue Mallet-Stevens (ca. 16-01 BT 26); facades and roofs, as well as the floor of the plot, of the building sis 7, rue Mallet-Stevens (ca. 16-01 BT 21); floor of the parcel of the building sis 10, rue Mallet-Stevens (cad. 16-01 BT 25); facades and roofs (excluding elevations) , the entrance hall and staircase serving the original floors as well as the floor of the cadastral parcel of the building sis 12, rue Mallet-Stevens and 9, rue du Docteur-Blanche (cad. 16-01 BT 24); ground of the rue Mallet-Stevens (cad. 16-01 BT 90): inscription by order of 17 October 2000

Key figures

Robert Mallet-Stevens - Architect and contractor Designer of the street and its hotel (n°12).
Daniel Dreyfus - Banker and original owner Landowner (#7).
Maurice Bokanowski - Minister for Trade Open the street in 1927.
Jean et Joël Martel - Twin sculptors Occupants of the house-workshop (n°10).
Élisabeth de Gramont - Aristocrat and muse Occupying hotel Dreyfus (n°7).
Louis Barillet - Glass painter Author of glass windows of stairwells.
Jean Prouvé - Iron and steel Creator of iron doors.

Origin and history

The rue Mallet-Stevens is a private road in Paris, inaugurated on 20 July 1927 in the 16th arrondissement. It is 7 metres long and 77 metres long, and forms a dead end accessible only by the Rue du Docteur-Blanche. Designed as a non-commercial residential development, it is served by metro line 9 (Ranelagh Station). Its layout and town planning reflect the modernist aesthetic of the inter-war period, with reinforced cement buildings with clean lines, characteristic of the architectural movement of the period.

The street bears the name of its architect, Robert Mallet-Stevens (1886-1945), a major figure in modern French architecture. The initial project is based on land belonging to banker Daniel Dreyfus, loti to accommodate five private hotels, a caretaker's house (n°1) and the Mallet-Stevens agency itself (n°12). The inauguration, presided over by Minister Maurice Bokanowski, brings together personalities such as the Prefect of the Seine Paul Bouju and the police prefect Jean Chiappe, marking the symbolic importance of this urban project.

Among the remarkable buildings, Hotel Allatini (n°3-5) was requisitioned by the French Gestapo in 1942, serving as a torture centre during the occupation. At the Liberation, a list of fifteen gunmen was discovered there. No. 10 houses the former workshop house of twin sculptors Jean and Joël Martel, classified as a historical monument in 1990. The 7th Daniel Dreyfus hotel was occupied in 1929 by Elizabeth de Gramont, close to Eileen Gray. Subsequent changes (1970s) partially altered the integrity of the facades, despite late protection in 1975.

The ensemble illustrates the architectural innovation of the 1920s, with notable artistic collaborations: stained glass by Louis Barillet, ironworks by Jean Prouvé, and urban furniture designed by Mallet-Stevens (now gone). The street, partially classified as historical monuments in 2000, embodies both a modernist heritage and a painful memory of the Second World War. Its history reflects the tensions between preservation and urban evolution in the 20th century.

An inabooti project provided for a building at the n°9-11, never realized. Subsequent transformations, such as building elevations or replacement of original luminaires, demonstrate conservation challenges. Today, the street remains a symbol of the French architectural avant-garde, studied for its stylistic unity and its role in the history of Parisian urbanism.

External links