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Villa Beau Site in Nice dans les Alpes-Maritimes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine de vilégiature
Villa

Villa Beau Site in Nice

    17 Rue du Mont-Boron
    06300 Nice
Private property
Villa Beau Site à Nice
Villa Beau Site à Nice
Villa Beau Site à Nice
Villa Beau Site à Nice
Crédit photo : CHRIS BONTEMPS from NICE, FRANCE - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1882
Purchased by Eugene Vidis
1885
Acquisition by Achille Larrey
1890
Expansions by Biasini
vers 1910
Extensions by the widow Larrey
27 juillet 1987
Historical monument classification
1988
Legacy to the Institut de France
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs; music salon and its decor; terraces; factories known as Villa les Roches, Villa Hyacinthe, Villa Isba; veranda; garden floor; staircases and its decorative and carved elements (cd. KH 166): classification by decree of 27 July 1987

Key figures

Eugène Vidis - Nice merchant First known owner, changed the villa in 1882.
Achille Larrey - British negotiator Renamed the villa "Beau Site" in 1885.
Sébastien-Marcel Biasini - Architect Enlarged the villa in 1890, neoclassical style.
Gisèle Tissier - Last private owner Lègue la villa at the Institut de France in 1988.
Philippe Mialon - Nice architect Responsible for the current restoration of the villa.

Origin and history

The villa Beau Site, located 17 rue du Mont-Boron in Nice, is built in the last quarter of the 19th century. Originally, it is a square villa acquired in 1882 by Eugène Vidis, a Nice merchant, who adds a corner tower. In 1885, it was purchased by British merchant Achille Larrey, who gave it its current name and ordered major expansions to architect Sébastien-Marcel Biasini in 1890. These works include a side wing decorated with Corinthian columns, an arcade lookout on the tower, as well as statues and balustrades, giving it a neoclassical style sometimes called a neo-pumpian.

Between 1890 and 1910, the widow of Achilles Larrey expanded the estate by adding an isba troglodyte named "Les Rochers" and a building for the servants, "Hyacinthe". The villa then changed hands several times: acquired in the 1920s by diamondmaker Lewis Lindon, then sold in 1948 to Gisèle Tissier. When she died in 1988, she left the property to the Institut de France, on condition that she created a cultural foundation. After legal disputes, the villa was sold in 2005 to a German private individual, who undertook renovations.

Classified as a historical monument on 27 July 1987 for its facades, roofs, interior decorations and factories (including the villas Les Rochers and Hyacinthe), Beau Site illustrates the architectural heritage of the Riviera. In 1987, the band The Cure shot Catch's video. Today, it is privately owned and is the subject of a restoration led by the architect Philippe Mialon of Nice, under the control of the Bâtiments de France. Its panorama of the bay of Nice and its decorative elements make it a remarkable testimony to the architectural eclecticism of the late 19th century.

External links