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Château de Pont-Saint-Mard dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Aisne

Château de Pont-Saint-Mard

    Le Château
    02380 Pont-Saint-Mard
Château de Pont-Saint-Mard
Château de Pont-Saint-Mard
Crédit photo : Enrevseluj - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
Années 1850
Park creation by Varé
1914-1918
Destruction during the First World War
années 1920
New Normandy reconstruction
Années 1920
Reconstruction in neo-norman style
années 1930
Park enrichment
milieu du XIXe siècle
Construction of the park
14 octobre 2002
First MH protection
2002
First registration for historical monuments
13 mai 2019
Second MH protection
2019
Second inscription in historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The park, garden and fence walls (cad. B2 438, 440-444, 1543) : entry by order of 14 October 2002; the facades and roofs of the master house and the old greenhouse, in full, as delimited on the plan annexed to the decree (Box B 437 and 1710): inscription by order of 13 May 2019

Key figures

Louis-Sulpice Varé - Landscape Manufacturer of the park in the 1850s.
Félix Duten - Architect Contributes to post-1918 reconstruction.
Albert Roulet - Entrepreneur Participates in reconstruction work.

Origin and history

The Château de Pont-Saint-Mard, located in the eponymous commune of the department of Aisne, is a building whose recent history is marked by a total reconstruction. The former castle, destroyed during the First World War, was rebuilt identically on its original foundations, adopting a neo-norman regionalist style. This architectural choice reflects a desire to preserve the spirit of the place while adapting to the tastes of the early twentieth century.

The park and gardens, designed in the 1850s by landscape architect Louis-Sulpice Varé, are a remarkable legacy of the mid-19th century. Structured according to the boundaries of an 18th century property, they incorporate functional and aesthetic features such as a greenhouse, a vegetable garden and a hydraulic system. Starting in the 1930s, the park was enriched with statues and new plant species, while its paths were simplified to modernize its circulation.

The castle and its estate enjoy double protection as historical monuments. The fence walls, park and gardens were registered in 2002, followed in 2019 by the facades, roofs of the mansion and the old greenhouse. These measures highlight the heritage value of a complex combining reconstructed architecture and preserved historical landscapes.

The reconstruction after 1918 and the landscape developments of the 19th and 20th centuries illustrate a dynamic of restoration and continuous enrichment. The castle thus embodies a synthesis between local memory, with its unchanged location since the eighteenth century, and stylistic evolutions, as evidenced by its neo-Norman architecture.

Architects and craftsmen who contributed to its reconstruction, such as Félix Duten and Albert Roulet, worked under the influence of the regionalist currents of the inter-war period. Their intervention is part of a broader reconstruction of monuments destroyed during the Great War, where emphasis was placed on reinterpretation of traditional styles rather than on identical reproduction.

External links