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Villa Saint-Roch à Ambazac en Haute-Vienne

Haute-Vienne

Villa Saint-Roch

    6 Allée de Saint-Roch
    87240 Ambazac

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1879
Construction of the villa
1904
Sale to widow Fontanille
1906
Acquisition by Mr. Pavy
1er avril 2021
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The villa Saint-Roch in total, the facades and roofs of the caretaker's house and its outbuildings, the park with its factory elements as well as the driveway of Saint-Roch, located on parcels n°8 to 13, appearing in the cadastre section AX, as represented in red on the annexed plan: inscription by order of 1 April 2021

Key figures

M. Ruaud - Initial sponsor Director of porcelain factory.
M. Pavy - Owner (from 1906) Mayor of the 15th arrondissement of Paris.

Origin and history

Villa Saint-Roch was built in 1879 for Mr. Ruaud, director of the porcelain factory of Ambazac, reflecting the local industrial development. The estate, surrounded by a stone wall of 2 meters, includes a guard house with dovecote, orchards in staircases, and an irrigation system fed by springs. Its park, divided into terraces, combines utility (fishery, cressonneries) and amenities (belvedere-glacière, music kiosk, tennis court). The property changed hands in 1904 (widow Fontanille), then in 1906 with Mr Pavy, a Parisian mayor whose wife was from Saint-Priest-Taurion, who added a southern tower and enriched the landscape.

The park, conceived as a romantic setting, multiplies the factories: cave-belvedere overlooking the railway, English river crossed by two bridges (deck and rock), circular basin with artificial island populated by carp, or pagoda near a lake. The successive owners cultivate remarkable species and decorative elements (barcs, mushrooms in rock, carved tables). The estate, including farm and land, illustrates the taste of the era for picturesque gardens mixing nature and artifice, while serving as a secondary residence to an industrial and political elite.

Listed as a Historic Monument in 2021, the villa and its park (aisle of Saint-Roch, house of the caretaker, factory elements) are protected for their representativeness of 19th-century garden art in Limousin. The site, although partially accessible, retains traces of its past use: cooler, laundry, or rotunda for vehicles. Its history reflects the social dynamics of the period, between local heritage (porcelain d'Ambazac) and national networks of influence (Paris Mayor).

External links