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House à Neufchâteau dans les Vosges

House

    3 Place Carrière
    88300 Neufchâteau
Private property

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1ère moitié XVIIIe siècle
Construction of house
Milieu XIXe siècle
Adding the wooden gallery
19 janvier 2000
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs, vestibule, bread oven and fireplace (Box AB 128): inscription by order of 19 January 2000

Key figures

Famille de Sauville - Historical owner Influent line of men of dress.

Origin and history

The house in Neufchâteau, in the Great East, is a building built in the first half of the eighteenth century. It is distinguished by its typical architecture of the period, with a partially vaulted basement, a ground floor and a square floor. At the back, the facade is framed by two pavilions and a two-storey wooden gallery, added in the mid-19th century. This monument preserves remarkable elements such as a bread oven and its 18th-century stone fireplace, as well as painted panelling and a fireplace in the kitchen, dating from the 17th or early 18th century.

This house belonged to the Sauville family, an influential lineage of the area that counted several men of dress in the 18th century. The later façade was redesigned in the 19th century, reflecting the architectural evolutions of this period. The building, partially protected since 2000, includes facades, roofs, a vestibule and the bread oven, demonstrating its heritage importance.

The location of the house, in 3 Place Carrière à Neufchâteau, is documented in the Mérimée base, although geographical accuracy is considered poor (note of 5/10). The monument, although not explicitly mentioned as open to the public, retains tangible traces of its history, linked to both its architecture and its former owners, the Sauville family.

External links