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Maison du Peuple de Châteauroux dans l'Indre

Patrimoine classé
Maison classée MH

Maison du Peuple de Châteauroux

    15 Rue de la République
    36000 Châteauroux
Ownership of the municipality

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1934
Initial project
1935
Unanimous support
27 juin 1937
Inauguration
1950
Uncompleted building
28 juin 2001
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The social centre in full (AK 435): registration by decree of 28 June 2001

Key figures

Camille Chautemps - President of the Council Inaugurated the monument in 1937.
Jacques Barge - Architect Designed the building and its functional plan.
René Lalique - Glass painter Collaborated in artistic beautification.
Léon Blum - Popular Front figure Inspired the social policy of the project.

Origin and history

The Maison du Peuple de Châteauroux, planned in 1934, was unanimously wanted by the inhabitants in 1935 and inaugurated in 1937 by Camille Chautemps, then President of the Council. This monument symbolizes the efforts of the Popular Front government to integrate marginalized populations into the city, combining health, education and recreation in one place. Designed as a model for small industrial cities, it aimed to form a local craft elite and offer structured cultural and sporting activities.

The architect Jacques Barge, originally from Châteauroux, translated this ambitious social programme into a sober concrete construction, animated by geometric volumes. The painter-glassman René Lalique also contributed to the beautification of the building. Although planned in slices, the construction site dragged in length and was still not completed in 1950. The social centre became a tool for medicalization, popular education and the promotion of hygienic leisure, reflecting the progressive ideals of the time.

Ranked a historic monument in 2001, the People's House illustrates a desire for social renewal through architecture. Its clear and functional plan allowed to articulate various services: medical consultations for mothers and children, vocational training, library, and sports spaces. The building is thus part of French cultural history as an attempt to create a "new man", physically and intellectually balanced, at the heart of an average city.

Today, this monument remains an architectural testimony of the social policies of the 1930s, combining utilitarianism and educational ambition. Its location at 15 rue de la République in Châteauroux, in Indre, makes it an emblematic place of the heritage of the Centre-Val de Loire, open to the visit and still anchored in local life.

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