Palais Berlitz

Coordinates: 48°52′13.63″N 2°20′3.96″E / 48.8704528°N 2.3344333°E / 48.8704528; 2.3344333

Palais Berlitz

The Palais Berlitz is an office building built in Paris in the 1930s on a quadrilateral formed by the Boulevard des Italiens, the rue Louis-le-Grand, the Rue de la Michodière and the rue du Hanovre.

It was built in place of the Pavillon du Hanovre which was dismantled and rebuilt in a park in the suburb of Paris.

Le Pavillon de Hanovre

Le Pavillon de Hanovre on the boulevard des Italiens
The Pavillon de Hanovre rebuilt in the Parc de Sceaux

Le Pavillon de Hanovre was built between 1758 and 1760 by the French architect Jean-Michel Chevotet (1698–1772) in the gardens of Maréchal de Richelieu rue Neuve-Saint-Augustin (currently Boulevard des Italiens).

33 boulevard des Italiens, c. 1907-1908

During the construction of the Palais Berlitz, it was disassembled and rebuilt in 1932 in Parc de Sceaux. The work was performed under the direction of the architect Léon Azéma, assisted by Louis Plousey and Urbain Cassan.

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Le palais Berlitz

33 boulevard des Italiens, Present
Idem

Under the name of the Palace of Hanover, it was built as an office building in the 1930s by the French architect Charles Lemaresquier (1870–1972) who conceived other buildings in the same style such as the headquarters of Félix Potin.

At the ground floor were stores and a newsreel theatre that seated 200.

The building was renamed the Palais Berlitz after the English language school which located to the building. In the 1950s the ground floor and basement of the building were converted into a 1,500-seat cinema called the Berlitz, and the old newsreel theatre was turned into a restaurant.

It was one of the most important first run movie theatres in Paris at that time. The design featured a huge curved lobby with stained glass windows leading to the big auditorium which had club armchairs. However, due to two large columns in the auditorium space, the size of the screen was limited.

In the 1980s Gaumont took over and divided the Berlitz including the restaurant (the former newsreel house) into six small screens. The place lost its original design and was not attractive.

In the 1990s the building was entirely rebuilt with only the facade remaining. In the new building, the new six-screen multiplex run by Gaumont has a much nicer design and has a total seating capacity of 1,137.

After the fire of the Credit Lyonnais headquarters, the French bank LCL installed there its main branch.

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Exhibition Le juif et la France (=The Jew and France)

Palais Berlitz is especially sadly notorious for an antisemitic exhibition during Nazi occupation Le juif et la France (5 September 1941-15 January 1942).

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, December 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.