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TEC4617537: Square d'Orleans, Paris 9th. Appoints in tribute to King Louis Philippe (1773-1850). In the romantic period, many famous families had made this residential complex a veritable phalanstere of artists. This space of time is very protected by the Historic Monuments, was built from 1830 to 1832 by the British architect Edward Crecy, who in 1829 had brought it to Melle Mars, famous actress of the Theatre Francais and formidable businesswoman. The Square is made up of three inner courtyards connected by vault passages (Ankillary Corridors) to the coffered ceilings. There were 46 apartments and artists' workshops, the last of which is still visible in the third courtyard. The central courtyard, monumental, is an English square in the style of Regent's Park in London, England. Composed of 4 buildings on 4 floors, lined with beds, planted with trees, it is decorated in its centre with green baskets and a jet of water fed by the water of the Ourcq Canal. / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617546: Square d'Orleans, Paris 75009. Appoints in tribute to King Louis Philippe (1773-1850). In the romantic period, many famous families had made this residential complex a veritable phalanstere of artists. This space of time is very protected by the Historic Monuments, was built from 1830 to 1832 by the British architect Edward Crecy, who in 1829 had brought it to Melle Mars, famous actress of the Theatre Francais and formidable businesswoman. The Square is made up of three inner courtyards connected by vault passages (Ankillary Corridors) to the coffered ceilings. There were 46 apartments and artists' workshops, the last of which is still visible in the third courtyard. The central courtyard, monumental, is an English square in the style of Regent's Park in London, England. Composed of 4 buildings on 4 floors, lined with beds, planted with trees, it is decorated in its centre with green baskets and a jet of water fed by the water of the Ourcq Canal. / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617652: Les Galeries Lafayette, 38-46ae boulevard Haussmann, Paris 9e. In 1906 the owners Alphonse Kahn and Theophile Bader entrusted the architect Georges Chedanne (1861-1940) with the construction of a new stone building Boulevard Haussmann. In view of the success of this new concept, Ferdinand Chanut extended the building in 1910-12. / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617670: La cupola du department store Le Printemps, 64-70 Boulevard Haussmann, Paris 9e. In 1907-1910, Rene Binet built a second store, taking over the architectural part of Paul Sedille while centering the ensemble on a six-storey octagonal hall under a double dome. The dome, the work of the master glassmaker Briere, is still visible on the sixth floor of the store. / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617695: La cupole des Galeries Lafayette, 38-46ae boulevard Haussmann, Paris 9e. In 1906 the owners Alphonse Kahn and Theophile Bader entrusted the architect Georges Chedanne (1861-1940) with the construction of a new stone building Boulevard Haussmann. In view of the success of this new concept, Ferdinand Chanut extended the building in 1910-12. / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617718: La cupola du department store Le Printemps, 64-70 Boulevard Haussmann, Paris 9e. In 1907-1910, Rene Binet built a second store, taking over the architectural part of Paul Sedille while centering the ensemble on a six-storey octagonal hall under a double dome. The dome, the work of the master glassmaker Briere, is still visible on the sixth floor of the store. / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617816: Les Galeries Lafayette, 38-46ae boulevard Haussmann, Paris 9e. The owners Alphonse Kahn and Theophile Bader entrusted the architect Georges Chedanne in 1906 with the construction of a new stone building. And in view of the success of this new concept, Ferdinand Chanut extended the building in 1910. / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617865: Lycee Condorcet, 8 rue du Havre, Paris 9th. Its setting is partly a historical monument since it is located in the buildings of the Capuchin convent of Saint Louis Díantine, built in the decennia of 1780 by the neoclassical architect Alexandre Theodore Brongniart (1739-1813) and became a national property of 1789. Founded in 1803, the lycee has many names, reflecting the political evolution of France (Lycee Bonaparte, then Bourbon, Fontanes and finally Condorcet / Bridgeman Images
TEC4617894: Lycee Condorcet, 8 rue du Havre, Paris 9th. Its setting is partly a historical monument since it is located in the buildings of the Capuchin convent of Saint Louis Díantine, built in the decennia of 1780 by the neoclassical architect Alexandre Theodore Brongniart (1739-1813) and became a national property of 1789. Founded in 1803, the lycee has many names, reflecting the political evolution of France (Lycee Bonaparte, then Bourbon, Fontanes and finally Condorcet / Bridgeman Images