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House à Uzel en Côtes-d'Armor

House

    5 Place aux Pots
    22460 Uzel
Private property
Maison
Maison
Crédit photo : Crepi22 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1788
Construction of house
Début XIXe siècle
Extension in depth
Années 1990
Demolition of a wing
14 avril 2006
Registration Historic Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The main house overlooking the Pots Square in total; the entire building body in return, except the contemporary addition for garage use located at its end; the courtyard south of the building in return, with its well; the garden to the northeast with its corner pavilion in full and its fence walls (cad. AB 621): registration by order of 14 April 2006

Key figures

Information non disponible - Suspected Sponsor Dealer in linen canvas (unnamed).

Origin and history

The house of Uzel is a house of notable built in 1788, probably commissioned by a linen merchant, flourishing activity in Brittany at that time. Its architecture consists of a main square body and a wing in elongated return, reflecting the social status of its owner. Despite the destruction of its original staircase and modifications in the 19th century, it retained most of its interior features, including remarkable woodwork.

At the beginning of the 19th century, the house was doubled in depth to meet new space needs. In the 1990s, an additional wing closing the court in the east was demolished, partially restoring its historical aspect. The property also includes a courtyard with a well and a garden with a corner pavilion, elements protected by registration for Historic Monuments in 2006.

The house illustrates the role of flax canvas traders in the Breton economy of the 18th century, where textile trade was a major source of wealth. Its state of conservation, despite some alterations, makes it a valuable testimony of the bourgeois habitat of this period, marked by a mixture of functionality and architectural ostentation.

The 2006 inscription covers the main house, the building body in return (excluding contemporary additions), the south courtyard with its well, as well as the garden and its pavilion. These protections highlight the heritage value of a complex of economic history, civil architecture and spatial organization typical of the houses of notables.

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