Neighbourhood Foundation Fin du Ier siècle av. J.-C. (≈ 5 av. J.-C.)
First house and craft workshops
1967
Site discovery
Site discovery 1967 (≈ 1967)
Searches during the construction of a high school
1996
Opening of the museum
Opening of the museum 1996 (≈ 1996)
Museum designed by Chaix and Morel
2021
Label Tourism and Handicap
Label Tourism and Handicap 2021 (≈ 2021)
Accessibility recognized by the State
Été 2025
Discovery of the mausoleum
Discovery of the mausoleum Été 2025 (≈ 2025)
Circular Mausoleum inspired by Augustus
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Archaeological site (Cd. AL 224, 230, 245, 249, 251, 253, 254, 327, placed la Plaine): classification by decree of 22 March 1983 - Parcels AL 322, 325, 473 and 474: registration by order of 25 October 2007
Key figures
Philippe Chaix et Jean-Paul Morel - Museum architects
Building design in 1996
Origin and history
The Gallo-Roman site of Saint-Roman-en-Gal, discovered in 1967 during the construction of a high school, is an artisanal and residential area of the ancient Vienna. Occupied at the end of the 1st century BC, it houses peristyle domuses, warehouses, shops and workshops. This area was bounded to the south by the Palais du Miroir, separating the districts of Saint-Romain-en-Gal and Sainte-Colombe-lès-Vienne. After an abandonment in the fourth to fifth centuries, convents settled there from the fifth century.
The museum, inaugurated in 1996 and managed by the Rhône department, exhibits mosaics, objects and models that reconstruct Gallo-Roman life. In 2021 he obtained the label Tourism and Handicap. A EUR 60 million renovation project, originally planned between 2027 and 2030, was cancelled in 2025, with the aim of renovating the exterior spaces, including the resumption of excavations.
In 2025, excavations revealed a circular Roman mausoleum (circa 50 AD), inspired by the Augustan mausoleum, with a diameter of 15 m and an estimated height of 6 m. This funeral monument, one of Gaul's best preserved, probably belonged to an aristocrat linked to imperial power. The site, classified as Historic Monument in 1983, attracts 70,000-80,000 visitors annually since 2010.
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