Monday 30 April 2007
Vosges …./…. Henri IV Had Four Sides
By David Pitt, Monday 30 April 2007 - 23:42 :: Places
Simply symmetry, French style! Henri IV had the Royal Pavilion constructed between 1605-1612 and then ordered the other 35 buildings to follow the same design, but of course on a lower elevation. Urban planning at the highest levels. This was the final replacement for the Hôtel de Tournelles the royal family residence from 1388-1559. Catherine de Medicis had that building torn down when she moved to the Louvre after a jousting accident killed her husband Henri II. Thus, twice, this was the primest of prime real estate, and even after the royals left many great luminaries including Richelieu and Victor Hugo lived here. It has regained some of its former luster and is considered a prestigious address once more. The oldest square in Paris is worth a visit.
Original appearance July 16, 2005, © 2005 / VOSGES, PLACE DES VOSGES, (SQUARE), 75003-004 / NONE OR NL / CIP 133, OO 08, RD 16, YP 30/4-16
It is on the Grand Axis so we are talking truly prime real estate. 25 hectares (that’s 61.77 acres) smack dab between the Louvre and the Concorde. It doesn’t get any primer than that. Catherine de Médicis commissioned it, André Le Nôtre designed it, and revolutionary history anointed it. Formal French-style gardens that became the prototype for many European public parks. Two major museums (Jeu de Paume featuring photography, and the Musée de l’Orangerie featuring Claude Monet) and two major pools with fountains grace the double terraced grounds that also feature dozens of sculptures created over the last 300 years. I don’t think gardens get any better than this, unless you go to the Bois de Boulogne, Parc Monceau, or the Jardin du Luxembourg. All in Paris, France.