Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Pavillon said Pompadour à Paris 1er dans Paris

Paris

Pavillon said Pompadour

    121 Rue de Ménilmontant
    75020 Paris 20e Arrondissement
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Pavillon dit Pompadour
Crédit photo : Auteur inconnu - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1770
Renovation by Moreau-Desproux
19 octobre 1928
Historical Monument
2003
Repurchase by the City of Paris
2007
Open to the public
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Pavillon dit Pompadour, to the right of the entrance court of the Maison de Secours: inscription by order of 19 October 1928

Key figures

Nicolas Carré de Baudouin - Owner and sponsor Fit transform the facade in 1770
Pierre-Louis Moreau-Desproux - Architect Designs the neoclassical facade
Jules et Edmond de Goncourt - Former owners They spent their childhood there

Origin and history

The Pompadour pavilion, also called Carré de Baudouin, is a madness (recreational house) built in the 18th century in the 20th arrondissement of Paris. Originally a resort, it was redesigned in 1770 by Pierre-Louis Moreau-Desproux for Nicolas Carré de Baudouin, who added a neoclassical facade with ionic columns. The site later became the property of the Goncourt brothers, who partially lived there as a child.

In 1836 the sisters of Saint Vincent de Paul set up an orphanage there, the Asylum of the Little Orphans, completed by a chapel. From 1971 to 1992, the site will house a medical and social centre and a home for young workers. Repurchased by the City of Paris in 2003, the pavilion was rehabilitated and reopened in 2007 as a free cultural space, including exhibitions, auditorium and popular university. Its adjacent garden, created in 2005, also houses urban art works.

Ranked a Historic Monument since 1928, the pavilion experienced a record attendance in 2018 with 90,000 visitors for an exhibition dedicated to Willy Ronis. Today, it combines 18th century architectural heritage and contemporary programming, while sheltering associations and a house of secularism.

External links