Villa Paul Poiret

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Villa Paul Poiret
Interior

Villa Paul Poiret in Mézy-sur-Seine, Yvelines, France, is an important example of modernist architecture. It was Cubism-inspired, and built in the early 1920s. Later Art Deco features were added. It was a private house originally designed by architect Robert Mallet-Stevens.

The house is in 48,500 square metres (12.0 acres) of parkland to the west of Paris, overlooking the Seine Valley. It is made of reinforced concrete to a geometric style.[1]

The villa was commissioned by fashion designer Paul Poiret in 1921. It was completed in 1925. The house fell into disrepair, and was sold by Poiret in 1930 to actress Elvira Popescu, who lived there from 1938 to 1985. Popescu hired the architect Paul Boyer in 1932 to alter the original design to the contemporary Art Deco "ocean liner" style, converting windows to portholes, and rounding-off terrace corners. The house was listed as an historic landmark in 1984.[1][2]

By 1999 the house had once more become dilapidated. It was bought by Laurent Brun. Under the direction of the two French committees responsible for listed buildings,[3] both the outside and inside have been restored.[1]

Villa Paul Poiret is part of the Journées de Patrimoine, (Heritage Days) scheme: public and private buildings of historic importance are open to the public on the third weekend in September.[1]

References[change | change source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 New York Times 26.11.2010: Rescuing a Cubist icon with French couture roots, retrieved 14 March 2011
  2. Ministry of Culture listing record, retrieved 14 March 2011
  3. The National Historic Landmark Commission and the Bâtiments de France