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House à Saint-Bonnet-le-Château dans la Loire

House

    8 Rue de la Châtelaine
    42380 Saint-Bonnet-le-Château
Private property
Maison
Maison
Maison
Maison
Maison
Maison
Maison
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin XVe - début XVIe siècle
Presumed construction
1824
Partial subdivision
24 juin 1929
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

House of the sixteenth century: inscription by order of 24 June 1929

Key figures

Famille Dupuy - Presumed owner Blazon hammered on the lintel evoked.

Origin and history

This 16th century house, located in Saint-Bonnet-le-Château, is distinguished by its typical Renaissance architecture. Its screw staircase serves two adjoining wings, with an original half-level distribution. Each floor has only one room, and the foreground rests on a cornice of granite crows. A tower overhanging, with a conical roof, houses circular spaces at each level. The bays on the ground floor evoke past commercial use, while the facade on Rue de la Châtelaine, more worked, contrasts with that of the perpendicular impasse.

The house would have belonged to the Dupuy family, as a marteled coat of arms on the lintel of the staircase, now illegible. Probably dating from the late 15th or early 16th century, the building was transformed: some bays were walled, and a chimney on the first floor was destroyed. The plot, subdivided in three in 1824, now forms a U around a central courtyard, where an octagonal pillar suggests the ancient existence of a portico. It was added to the additional inventory of Historic Monuments in 1929 and now houses on the first floor the Amis du Vieux Saint-Bonnet.

The building illustrates the urban evolution of Saint-Bonnet-le-Château, with traces of successive adaptations: traces of removal on the façade of the impasse, reuse of materials (like a piece of parquet from the old library), and change of vocation (from a private residence to a municipal use). The presence of shop windows on the ground floor reflects its integration into the medieval or reborn economic fabric, while the turret and the staircase in vis underline its initial social status, probably linked to an affluent family like the Dupuy.

External links