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Swimming pool located 160 Oberkampf Street à Paris 1er dans Paris

Paris

Swimming pool located 160 Oberkampf Street

    160 Rue Oberkampf
    75011 Paris 11e Arrondissement
Crédit photo : Shonagon - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1887
Opening of the Paris Baths
Années 1920
Major changes
25 août 2023
Registration Historic Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The following elements of the swimming pool: the swimming pool itself, including its glass floor and the surrounding terrace; the vestibule with its stained glass windows; the fireplace in the courtyard; all located 160 Oberkampf Street on Parcel No. 148, shown in the cadastre section AV, as delimited on the plans annexed to the decree: inscription para decree of 25 August 2023

Key figures

Auguste Perrin - Architect Designer of the pool in 1887.
Claude-Marie Cathiard - Sponsor Deputy mayor, initial owner.

Origin and history

The swimming pool at 160 rue Oberkampf, opened in 1887 under the name of Bains parisiennes, is part of the movement to create the first outdoor swimming pools in Paris from the 1880s onwards. These private facilities offered a variety of baths (cold, hot, steam), hydrotherapeutic treatments, and a swimming pool, often using condensation water from nearby industrial machinery. The Oberkampf swimming pool, sixth of its kind after Château-Landon (1884), was distinguished by its mixed programme: housing, commerce, and a restaurant on the banks of the basin, all designed by architect Auguste Perrin for Claude-Marie Cathiard, deputy mayor of the 3rd arrondissement.

In the 1920s, the swimming pool underwent major changes: its L-shaped basin ( unique in Paris, dictated by the constraints of the terrain), its glass cobblestone cover replacing the original metal frame, and the replacement of the cabins. Unlike other swimming pools of the time, it preserves original elements such as its vestibule with thematic stained glass windows and its fireplace in the courtyard. These transformations, less radical than elsewhere, make it an example preserved of the first Parisian swimming pools, before their standardization in the 1920s. Its inscription in the Historical Monuments in 2023 protects these remains.

The building, at the back of a courtyard on a narrow plot, illustrates the adaptation of urban swimming pools to available spaces. Its initial basin, although modified, remains legible and its dimensions have not been altered by subsequent standards. The Oberkampf pool thus embodies the evolution of seaside practices in Paris, from the therapeutic and elitist model of the 1880s to a more sporty and popular use in the 20th century, while preserving traces of its industrial and architectural history.

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