Construction of house 1700-1799 (≈ 1750)
Estimated period of construction in the 18th century.
17 juin 1925
Protection of the monumental door
Protection of the monumental door 17 juin 1925 (≈ 1925)
Registration by ministerial decree of vantals.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Monumental door on street with its vantals: inscription by decree of 17 June 1925
Origin and history
The house at 36 rue Vieille-du-Temple, in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, is an 18th-century building. It is representative of the Parisian civil architecture of this period, marked by sober facades and discreet decorative elements. His heritage interest lies mainly in his monumental gate, which was officially protected in 1925.
The monumental gate, with its vantals, was inscribed under the title of Historical Monuments by an order of 17 June 1925. This recognition reflects the artistic or historical value of this architectural element, typical of the bourgeois entrances of the Enlightenment. The building, although partially documented, illustrates the urban heritage of Paris, often unknown outside the major monuments.
The location of this house, in the Marais district, is emblematic of a Paris undergoing a transformation in the 18th century. This sector, then partly aristocratic, housed private hotels and cossue residences. Today, the accuracy of its location is estimated as "passible" (note 5/10), based on available data, reflecting the boundaries of old geographic sources.
No information is provided on the current use of the building (visit, rental, etc.), or on any historic owners or occupants. The sources are limited to architectural data and the legal protection of the door, without details of its social history or subsequent transformations.
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