L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier

Montpellier is one of France’s most ‘medical’ cities and like many other French cities had a ‘general hospital’, a sort of prison-hospital created by Louis XIV. In this institution, designed to contain and Christianise the poor, the chapel dedicated to Saint Charles played a particularly important r...

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Main Author: Nicolas Morestin
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication 2017-02-01
Series:In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/14179
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spelling doaj-195f80075a354b00b81cc48f50d95dfe2020-11-24T22:08:44ZfraMinistère de la Culture et de la CommunicationIn Situ : Revue de Patrimoines1630-73052017-02-013110.4000/insitu.14179L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalierNicolas MorestinMontpellier is one of France’s most ‘medical’ cities and like many other French cities had a ‘general hospital’, a sort of prison-hospital created by Louis XIV. In this institution, designed to contain and Christianise the poor, the chapel dedicated to Saint Charles played a particularly important rôle. The hospital evolved gradually during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and after being a place of imprisonment and control of the poor, it gradually opened up to proper medicine. In a state of disrepair, the institution was progressively replaced by the new Saint-Charles clinics opened at the end of the 1930s. For a while these clinics were at the forefront of medicine and hospital architecture, before being supplanted in turn by the new hospital centres built at the periphery of the city in the 1970s. Confronted with the disrepair of these hospital buildings (generally called the ‘îlot Saint-Charles’) the site, close to the historic centre of the city, presents important heritage values but also important real estate ones. During the years after 2000, the city launched an ambitious programme for the rehabilitation of the site, now in its second phase. The îlot Saint-Charles is already better known and commencing its cultural and heritage renaissance.http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/14179Montpelliergeneral hospitalSaint-Charles clinicschapelmaison des ChœursLouis XIV
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicolas Morestin
spellingShingle Nicolas Morestin
L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier
In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
Montpellier
general hospital
Saint-Charles clinics
chapel
maison des Chœurs
Louis XIV
author_facet Nicolas Morestin
author_sort Nicolas Morestin
title L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier
title_short L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier
title_full L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier
title_fullStr L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier
title_full_unstemmed L’îlot Saint-Charles à Montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier
title_sort l’îlot saint-charles à montpellier : un triple programme de réhabilitation du patrimoine hospitalier
publisher Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication
series In Situ : Revue de Patrimoines
issn 1630-7305
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Montpellier is one of France’s most ‘medical’ cities and like many other French cities had a ‘general hospital’, a sort of prison-hospital created by Louis XIV. In this institution, designed to contain and Christianise the poor, the chapel dedicated to Saint Charles played a particularly important rôle. The hospital evolved gradually during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and after being a place of imprisonment and control of the poor, it gradually opened up to proper medicine. In a state of disrepair, the institution was progressively replaced by the new Saint-Charles clinics opened at the end of the 1930s. For a while these clinics were at the forefront of medicine and hospital architecture, before being supplanted in turn by the new hospital centres built at the periphery of the city in the 1970s. Confronted with the disrepair of these hospital buildings (generally called the ‘îlot Saint-Charles’) the site, close to the historic centre of the city, presents important heritage values but also important real estate ones. During the years after 2000, the city launched an ambitious programme for the rehabilitation of the site, now in its second phase. The îlot Saint-Charles is already better known and commencing its cultural and heritage renaissance.
topic Montpellier
general hospital
Saint-Charles clinics
chapel
maison des Chœurs
Louis XIV
url http://journals.openedition.org/insitu/14179
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