L’agglomération hospitalière de Cholet

Like other hospitals during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the hospital at Cholet evolved according to a series of structuring facts: the legislative context, urban functions whether old or new, population growth, social demands for quality healthcare, professionalisation of the medical per...

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Main Author: Éric Morin
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication 2017-02-01
Series:In Situ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/14185
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author Éric Morin
author_facet Éric Morin
author_sort Éric Morin
collection DOAJ
description Like other hospitals during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the hospital at Cholet evolved according to a series of structuring facts: the legislative context, urban functions whether old or new, population growth, social demands for quality healthcare, professionalisation of the medical personnel, chronic financial difficulties... The hospitals of Cholet are a reflection of a fast-growing town, based on an active industrial sector, a sub-prefecture with barracks for army regiment, a town which, in the 1960s opted for a new hospital centre at the edge of town and left its old hospital in a state of abandonment. Where its real estate history is concerned, this old hospital is the result of local and national building agencies: figures in the administration, benefactors, the prefect, the ministry of War and the ministry of Health. The construction, in the 1830s, of a modern, hygienic building, specially for soldiers, is at the origins of the hospital agglomeration. The implantation of this building, its cost and its architectural forms will have a strong influence on subsequent additions. In a maze of intertwining buildings, the general plan is of a comb design, maintained up to the additions of 1912. But this triumph of economic reasoning was never seen as an evidence. Each time a new addition was planned, the proponents of the pavilion model (mostly medical professionals) defended this vision, but to no avail. Now, at the end of the twentieth century, the problem is one of how to convert a hospital site, in a state of abandonment. The municipal team has two ambitions: to use the space for the creation of teaching facilities and for the arts of the spectacle, and to enhance the existing heritage but not to the point of refusing all new build. It is now a site with a privileged place in the town, offering two visions of hospital heritage but, unfortunately, without any traces of its former hospital activities.
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spelling doaj-art-090df8cd42eb45568c4fe1540a0efeae2025-08-20T02:37:46ZfraMinistère de la Culture et de la CommunicationIn Situ1630-73052017-02-013110.4000/insitu.14185L’agglomération hospitalière de CholetÉric MorinLike other hospitals during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the hospital at Cholet evolved according to a series of structuring facts: the legislative context, urban functions whether old or new, population growth, social demands for quality healthcare, professionalisation of the medical personnel, chronic financial difficulties... The hospitals of Cholet are a reflection of a fast-growing town, based on an active industrial sector, a sub-prefecture with barracks for army regiment, a town which, in the 1960s opted for a new hospital centre at the edge of town and left its old hospital in a state of abandonment. Where its real estate history is concerned, this old hospital is the result of local and national building agencies: figures in the administration, benefactors, the prefect, the ministry of War and the ministry of Health. The construction, in the 1830s, of a modern, hygienic building, specially for soldiers, is at the origins of the hospital agglomeration. The implantation of this building, its cost and its architectural forms will have a strong influence on subsequent additions. In a maze of intertwining buildings, the general plan is of a comb design, maintained up to the additions of 1912. But this triumph of economic reasoning was never seen as an evidence. Each time a new addition was planned, the proponents of the pavilion model (mostly medical professionals) defended this vision, but to no avail. Now, at the end of the twentieth century, the problem is one of how to convert a hospital site, in a state of abandonment. The municipal team has two ambitions: to use the space for the creation of teaching facilities and for the arts of the spectacle, and to enhance the existing heritage but not to the point of refusing all new build. It is now a site with a privileged place in the town, offering two visions of hospital heritage but, unfortunately, without any traces of its former hospital activities.https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/14185hospitalhygienismmilitary hospitalhospital heritagerehabilitationhospices
spellingShingle Éric Morin
L’agglomération hospitalière de Cholet
In Situ
hospital
hygienism
military hospital
hospital heritage
rehabilitation
hospices
title L’agglomération hospitalière de Cholet
title_full L’agglomération hospitalière de Cholet
title_fullStr L’agglomération hospitalière de Cholet
title_full_unstemmed L’agglomération hospitalière de Cholet
title_short L’agglomération hospitalière de Cholet
title_sort l agglomeration hospitaliere de cholet
topic hospital
hygienism
military hospital
hospital heritage
rehabilitation
hospices
url https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/14185
work_keys_str_mv AT ericmorin lagglomerationhospitalieredecholet