The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Castle, park, house, dovecote ... here are the 8 heritage lottery sites in Ile-de-France

2020-08-31T19:33:08.974Z


Stéphane Bern launched this Monday at the Murs à Pêches in Montreuil the third edition of the heritage lottery. Eight sites will benefit from this assistance


The third edition of the heritage lottery was launched this Monday in Seine-Saint-Denis.

Stéphane Bern, Mr. Heritage of President Macron, unveiled the names of the 101 new "winners" of the operation.

This represents one site or monument per department.

From this week, players will be able to find the new scratch tickets at their tobacconist, at 15 euros, to hope for a record gain: 1.5 million euros.

You will then have to wait until September 9 for a special classic Loto draw which will be followed by 4 others until the 19, D-Day for Heritage Days.

Here are the eight sites selected for Ile-de-France.

- The medieval cellar of the Ourscamp house

in Paris.

This all-stone building built in the 13th century was originally occupied by the Cistercian monks of the Notre-Dame-d'Ourscamp abbey, located near Noyon (Oise), where they stored the crops produced at the abbey for resell them on the Parisian markets.

Hence a very large cellar of 200 m2.

Today it is the headquarters of the Pari Historique association.

The cellar of the Ourscamp house.

/ DR  

-

The southern icehouse and the chapel icehouse in Vanves

(Hauts-de-Seine).

The remains can be found in the Pic municipal park, which is located on the former property of the Duchess of Mortemart in the 18th century.

The cooler was used to keep food cool and to make sorbets and Italian ice cream that the countess loved.

In the following century, it was converted into a chapel.

The whole is now overgrown with vegetation.

-

Les Murs à Pêche, in Montreuil

(Seine-Saint-Denis) where the official launch of the operation was held.

These old arboreal plots, where peach trees were cultivated as well as pear trees, extend over 34 hectares, part of which is already classified.

The fishing walls of Montreuil extend over 34 hectares, part of which is classified.

LP / Aurélie Ladet  

-

The dovecote of Périgny-sur-Yerres

(Val-de-Marne).

The 16th century building is the last vestige of the Périgny-le-Grand “castle”, made up of a stately home and a vast farm.

The Périgny dovecote / Wikipedia  

Newsletter - Most of the news

Every morning, the news seen by Le Parisien

I'm registering

Your email address is collected by Le Parisien to enable you to receive our news and commercial offers.

Learn more

-

Gérard Philipe's house in Cergy

(Val-d'Oise).

This large 19th century bourgeois residence, built in a 5 hectare park on the banks of the Oise, was acquired by the actor in 1954.

The house where Gérard Philipe lived for six years near the village of Cergy.

/The Parisian  

-

The charter exchange in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine

(Yvelines).

This is where the river transport operations of goods carried out by the local inland waterways were organized.

It was created after the obligation of the tour de role for the boatmen, and decreed by the Popular Front in 1936. This charter exchange was established in a café, before a building was dedicated to it by the national office of navigation, from 1959.

The charter exchange operated until 2000. LP / Yves Fossey  

-

Boussard park in Lardy (Essonne)

.

Created in 1927 by Henri Boussard, it was inspired by a model presented at the Decorative Arts exhibition of 1925. The principle was to make beauty with simple and economical materials: industrial bricks, concrete slabs, mosaics of tiles broken and carved sandstone stairs.

Geometrically shaped, the park is organized around a water path.

Boussard Park designed by architect Joseph Marrast.

LP / Isoline Fontaine  

- The castle of Forges (Seine-et-Marne)

.

Built in the 18th century by the architect Pierre Desmaisons, to whom we owe the central part, it was completed in the 19th century by two side wings.

For a long time, it was a horticultural school and a center for learning horse trades.

In 2018, it hosted the Transition campus.

The castle of Forges.

LP / Sophie Bordier  

Source: leparis

All news articles on 2020-08-31

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.