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Necker Hospital - Sick children à Paris 1er dans Paris

Paris

Necker Hospital - Sick children

    149 Rue de Sèvres
    75015 Paris 15e Arrondissement
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Hôpital Necker - Enfants malades
Crédit photo : Celette - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1778
Necker Hospice Foundation
1802
Opening of the Hospital for Sick Children
1816
Stethoscope Invention
1837-1852
Construction of the Necker square
1920
Fusion Necker - Sick children
1952
First kidney transplant in Europe
1999
First global gene therapy
2006
Historical Monument
2013
Opening of the Laennec building
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs of the Archambault Pavilion; the facades and roofs of the Square Necker; the facades and roofs of the Laennec courtyard; the portal of 151, rue de Sèvres (cad. CV 01): registration by decree of 10 March 2006

Key figures

Madame Necker (Suzanne Curchod) - Founder of the Necker hospital Wife of the Minister of Finance.
Jacques Necker - Minister of Finance of Louis XVI Support for the foundation of the hospital.
René Laennec - Inventor physician Created the stethoscope in 1816.
Jean-Jacques Huvé - Square architect Necker Designed the quadrilateral (1837-1852).
Jean Hamburger - Pioneer Nephrologist First kidney transplant in 1952.
Claude Griscelli - Immunologist Described Griscelli syndrome (1978).
Alain Fischer - Geneticist First gene therapy (1999).
André Wogenscky - Modernist architect Partial reconstruction in 1966.

Origin and history

The hospital Necker-Enfants maladies has its origins in two separate institutions: the Hospital of Charity of the parishes of Saint-Sulpice and Gros Caillou, founded in 1778 by Madame Necker (wife of Jacques Necker, Minister of Finance of Louis XVI) in the former convent of Benedictines Notre-Dame-de-Liesse. This hospice, renamed Necker Hospital in 1802, was distinguished by humanized care, with one bed per patient, a rarity at the time. At the same time, the Hospital of Sick Children, the world's first paediatric hospital, was established in 1802 by the General Council of Hospitals of Paris on the site of the Maison de l'Enfant Jésus, a former orphanage. With 250 beds and a five-hectare garden, he innovated by separating children by pathology and applying strict hygiene standards.

The two contiguous hospitals merged in the 1920s, keeping their specialties (adults for Necker, paediatrics for Sick Children). The site was partially rebuilt in 1966 by architect André Wogensky, disciple of Le Corbusier. Among the historical buildings, the Archambault Pavilion (late 17th-early 18th century), remains of the Royal House of the Child Jesus, and the Necker Square (1837-1852), designed by Jean-Jacques Huvé, remain. The latter, inspired by military hospitals, forms a quadrilateral around a garden. In 2008, the Laennec building (55,000 m2) modernized the mother-child centre, despite controversies related to the demolition of old buildings.

The hospital is a place of world first medical : invention of stethoscope by Laennec (1816), first kidney transplant in Europe (1952), first gene therapy (1999), or the description of Griscelli syndrome (1978). Specializing in rare diseases (32 labeled centres) and genetics (Institut Imagine created in 2007), it accommodates 20% of patients outside the Île-de-France. Its seven-pole organization (pediatrics, emergencies, research) and its affiliation with the Université Paris-Cité make it a major player in medical innovation.

The protected architectural heritage includes the facades of the Archambault Pavilion, the Necker Square, and the Laënnec Courtyard, which have been listed as Historic Monuments since 2006. The hospital also houses a work by Keith Haring (1987) in a stairwell. Today, it combines conservation of classical buildings (such as the former Benedictine convent) and modern infrastructure, symbolizing the joint evolution of care and heritage.

His role in medical training and research is historical: figures such as Jean-Louis Baudelocque (pediatrics), Félix Guyon (urology), or Claude Griscelli (immunology) have exercised there. The site, unique geographically among hospital groups in Paris, remains a reference for paediatric emergencies, genetic diseases, and transplants, while preserving architectural elements of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.

External links