Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

House à Richelieu en Indre-et-Loire

House

    19 Grand Rue
    37120 Richelieu
Private property
Crédit photo : Juliofsanguino - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
14 mars 1633
First allocation of land
août 1633
Construction begins
23 juillet 1634
Second allocation of land
9 juin 1932
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facade and roof: inscription by decree of 9 June 1932

Key figures

Cardinal de Richelieu - Sponsor and planner Initiator of the ideal city
Jacques Lemercier - Chief Architect Author of the urban plan
Jean Barbet - Design designer Author of the original drawing
Nicolas de Rambouillet - First beneficiary of the land Attribution in 1633 with Acéré
Charles de Brussel - Second recipient of land Attribution in 1634

Origin and history

The house of Richelieu is part of the ambitious urban project launched by Cardinal Richelieu, which transformed his native village into an ideal city. The plans, designed by architect Jacques Lemercier, provided for a strict geometrical layout: ditches, ramparts, monumental gates, and symmetrical streets lined with aligned houses. This project reflected the cardinal's political and aesthetic ambitions, combining military rigor and classical elegance.

The land of this house was given twice: first to Nicolas de Rambouillet and Marc Antoine Acéré on 14 March 1633, then to Charles de Brussel, Sieur de Vailleconte, on 23 July 1634. Its construction began according to the plans of Jean Barbet in August 1633, but inconsistencies between dates and drawings raise questions about their validity or an anticipation of the work. The building, profoundly redesigned to accommodate a medico-pedagogical institute, lost its original stairs, retaining only an 18th century stone fireplace on the first floor.

Classified as a Historic Monument since 1932 for its facades and roofs, this house illustrates the architectural heritage of Richelieu. Its history reflects urban and functional change from an aristocratic residence to a building dedicated to special education. The successive transformations altered its initial aspect, but its integration into the Lemercier plan made it a valuable witness to 17th century urban planning.

External links