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Printing Yvert à Amiens dans la Somme

Somme

Printing Yvert

    9 Rue des Corps Nuds Sans Testé
    80000 Amiens
Imprimerie Yvert
Imprimerie Yvert
Imprimerie Yvert
Imprimerie Yvert
Imprimerie Yvert
Crédit photo : HaguardDuNord (talk) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1774
Attestation of the Mons Hotel
1831
Arrival of Eugene Yvert
1844
Reconstruction of the Mons Hotel
1903
Purchased by Louis Yvert
1926
Art Deco expansion
1999
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades of the buildings of the islet Yvert, as well as the facade in cut strip at the corner of the rue des Corps-Nus-Sans-Teste and the rue des Jacobins (Box AK 80, 81, 84, 85): inscription by order of 9 December 1999

Key figures

Eugène Yvert - Founder of printing Installed activity in 1839 in Amiens.
Louis Yvert - Eugene grandson, industrial Enlarged printing in 1903 and 1926.
M. de Tourtier - Initial owner of the hotel 18th century mansion.

Origin and history

The Yvert printing plant in Amiens is an architectural complex dating back to the second half of the 18th century. The original building, probably a mansion (the one in Tourtier, attested in 1774), has been transformed and enlarged over the centuries. In 1831, Eugene Yvert, founder of the printing company, moved to Rue des Trois-Cailloux and expanded his activity there. The building, in classic style, features a 10-span facade and a body of passage typical of ancient city centres.

In 1844, the former hotel in Mons, adjacent and dated 1774, was rebuilt with its original plan. Louis Yvert, grandson of Eugene, acquired in 1903 to set up the printing offices there, preserving the glasswork of the period. A workshop covered with sheds replaces the garden. The cadastral documents of 1813 and 1851 reveal the evolution of the site, with successive extensions and a courtyard filled with constructions.

The modernization continued in 1926 with the addition of Art Deco workshops, characterized by a reinforced concrete frame and a bas-relief representing a printer in front of a press. This innovative style contrasts with older brick buildings. The ensemble, classified as Historical Monument in 1999 for its facades, illustrates the adaptation of an urban heritage to industrial needs, while preserving elements of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

The Yvert & Tellier printing company, active in the local press (Chronicle Picarde, Journal d的Amiens), specializes in philately after the First World War. In 1929, a new western workshop was built. The archives also mention steam appliances as early as 1871 and a staff of more than 20 employees in 1962. The site, private property, remains a rare testimony of industrial architecture integrated with the ancient urban fabric of Amiens.

External links