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House à Angers en Maine-et-Loire

House

    7 Rue des Poeliers
    49100 Angers
Crédit photo : Sémhur (talk) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
3e quart du XVIe siècle
Initial construction
1789
Act of sale
1ère moitié du XVIIIe siècle
Adding chimneys
XIXe siècle
Reconstruction of stairs
20 mars 1929
Historical Monument
Années 1970
First restoration
Années 1990
Post-fire restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facade and roof: inscription by decree of 20 March 1929

Key figures

Murault - Owner (1789) Busy the left part of the house.
Jean Duchatel - Baker and owner (1789) It was on the right side of the house.

Origin and history

The Maison de la Cloche, located at 9 rue des Poëlliers in Angers, is an emblematic building of the 3rd quarter of the 16th century. It consists of two symmetrical housing units, unified by a wall-pignon façade on street. Sculpted wooden frame, with torchi-shaped hounds, contrasts with the back walls in shale masonry. The cover, with two long panels and appentis, as well as the top floor in the gable, illustrate the architectural techniques of the Angelian Renaissance. Originally, the house was home to two separate owners, as evidenced by an act of sale of 1789 designating it as the Bell.

Inside, the right posterior body retains an original chimney decorated with a bas-relief, while two other chimneys date from the 1st half of the 18th century. The stairs, rebuilt in the 19th century, replaced the original structures. The carved decoration of the poles has partially disappeared, wooded for the installation of balconies or a commercial front at an indefinite time. The house underwent two major restorations: in the 1970s (restitution of the windows on the first floor, formerly windows with balconies Louis XVI) and in the 1990s, after a fire damaged the facade.

Classified as a Historic Monument since 1929, the protection specifically concerns the facade and roof. The building reflects the evolution of domestic and commercial usage in the city centre, from its construction to modern adaptations. The traces of fire and successive modifications (like the balconies of the eighteenth century) highlight its turbulent history, linked to the artisanal and bourgeois life of Angers. The rue des Poëlliers, where it stands, was historically an animated axis, as evidenced by notarial acts and architectural transformations.

External links