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Montpellier-Saint-Roch station dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine ferroviaire
Gare classée MH

Montpellier-Saint-Roch station

    Place Auguste-Gibert
    34000 Montpellier
State ownership
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Gare de Montpellier-Saint-Roch
Crédit photo : Jean-Marie DAVID Dinkley - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1836-1839
Concession of the Montpellier-Sète line
1844
Construction of the current station
1852
Centralisation of passenger stations
1941
Pétain-Franco meeting
1984
Partial classification historical monument
2005
Official name change
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Central part (Case AB 59): entry by order of 28 December 1984

Key figures

Charles Didion - Bridge & Chaussées Engineer Designer of the station in 1844.
Georges Frêche - Mayor of Montpellier and regional president Promoter of the name *Saint-Roch*.
Paulin Talabot - Industrial and railway contractor Repurchase of the company in 1852.
Philippe Pétain - French Head of State (1940-1944) Meeting with Franco in 1941.
Francisco Franco - Spanish leader (1939-1975) Stopped in Montpellier in 1941.

Origin and history

Montpellier-Saint-Roch station, located in the Hérault department in the Occitanie region, finds its origins in the first half of the 19th century. Its initial construction in 1844, led by engineer Charles Didion, is part of the development of the French railway network, with a neoclassical facade decorated with Greek colonnades. This project was in response to the desire to open a trade route between Montpellier and Nîmes, in a context of rivalry between local landowners.

The station underwent several major changes, notably in 1852 with the transfer of the station from the line of Sète to this site, thus centralizing passenger traffic. Over the decades, expansions (1868-1871, 1905) and modernizations (underground passages in 1924, electrification in 1947) marked its evolution. During the Second World War, it was the scene of historical events, as the encounter between Pétain and Franco in 1941, and was bombarded in 1944.

The 1970-1980s marked a turning point with the partial destruction of the station (except the façade classified in 1984) to accommodate the TGV, inaugurated in 1982. The name Saint-Roch, formalized in 2005 by Georges Frêche, pays tribute to the patron saint of Montpellier and the surrounding area. The station, now integrated into the TER and TGV network, remains a multimodal hub with its tram and bus connections, despite the closure of its freight service in 2006.

The redevelopment of the 2010s, including a 200-metre window opened in 2014, modernized the space to accommodate 18,000 daily travellers. The New Saint-Roch project has converted old railway rights-of-way into residential and commercial areas, while preserving the historic façade. The station thus embodies the synthesis between 19th century industrial heritage and contemporary urban dynamism.

Architecturally, the station is distinguished by its peristyle with colonnades, the only vestige of its original style. The cast iron marqueses and the original hall have disappeared, but the site retains a central place in the national railway network, between the lines of Tarascon in Sète and Paulhan in Montpellier (not operated). Its role as a correspondence platform, coupled with its integration into the urban fabric, makes it a key monument to Montpellier's history.

External links