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Small pavilion of the First Empire à Thiais dans le Val-de-Marne

Val-de-Marne

Small pavilion of the First Empire

    59 Avenue René Panhard
    94320 Thiais
Crédit photo : Racinaire - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1824
Erection of the obelisk
1825
Construction of the pavilion
10 septembre 1929
Historical monument classification
Fin du XIXe siècle
Construction of the chapel
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Small First Empire Pavilion: Registration by Order of 10 September 1929

Key figures

Jean Nicolas Louis Durand - Architect and owner Designed and lived in the pavilion in 1825.

Origin and history

The Petit Pavillon du Premier Empire, located in Thiais in Val-de-Marne, is a country house built in 1825 by architect Jean Nicolas Louis Durand. This pavilion, sometimes called Pavillon Monge or Château Laplace due to an obelisk erected in 1824 in its garden, marks the last of Durand's three known buildings in this commune. It replaces a former medieval fief, the Bâcle, and is part of an architectural complex including a second house of similar style, guard housing and a disused chapel built at the end of the 19th century.

Ranked a historic monument by decree of September 10, 1929, the pavilion illustrates the architectural heritage of the First Empire and the beginning of the Restoration. Today, integrated into a veterans' home, the site retains its historic character despite contemporary adaptations. The obelisk of the garden, prior to the building of the pavilion (1824), evokes symbolic links with scientific figures of the time, although their direct involvement is not attested by the sources.

The property, originally designed as a private residence, reflects the sober and functional style advocated by Durand, an influential architect of his time. The auxiliary buildings, such as the chapel and guard houses, bear witness to a spatial organization typical of the 19th century bourgeois estates in Île-de-France. Their partial preservation offers an overview of the social and urban changes in Thiais, from a rural village to a Parisian suburbs.

External links