The Domaine de Versailles, part III !!!

I wrote couple posts on the Versailles property that the world comes there to see. However, in France we make a distinction between the Château or Palace and the Domaine or Domain of Versailles. One is just one building while the latter is the whole property including dependencies. You need to give it more time, its worth it, me think, Let me tell you again on the Domaine de Versailles, part III !!! Hope you enjoy the post as I.

For reference, the domaine de Versailles is the set of lands and buildings of 850 Ha. (8000 Ha before the French revolution) dependent on the Palace of Versailles. You do the math as one hectare is equal to 2.471 acres. Besides the castle, it includes 93 ha of gardens and 300 ha of forest. You count 20 km of enclosures, 42 km of alleys, and 372 magnificent statues !   However, also, the Petit and Grand Trianon with a park of 80 ha for the Grand and 50 ha for the Petit. Also, the Hameau de la Reine, the Grand and Petit Canal, Orangerie, and the pièce d’eau des 3 Suisses. It has 55 basins! The biggest are the Grand Canal 23 Ha, and 500 000 M3 of water and the Piéce d’Eau des 3 Suisses with 180 000 M3 of water. A total of 35 km of canals and 600 water jets. The property goes back way back of the Grand Canal into the towns of St Cyr l’école and its many gates or portes that encircle the old Domain of Versailles for 43 km!!

The Grande Perspective imagined by André Le Nôtre on both sides of the castle. starts from the Apollo basin by the Tapis Vert or green carpet, esplanade which descends towards the Grand Canal. Beyond that, the alley leaves the so-called Étoile Royale or Royal Star roundabout and crosses the towns of Versailles, Saint-Cyr-l’école, Fontenay-le-Fleury, Rennemoulin and Villepreux.Sublime ride ! The Allée royale or Royal Alley was the main one of the five alleys leaving in a bundle from the Royal Star, forming a majestic landscaped set which was compared to the king’s hand landing on his territory. Originally, it was a grassy avenue 97 meters wide. unobstructed in its center, it is framed on both sides by two main aisles of 5 meters, bordered by a double alignment of rural elms trees.

One of its gorgeous walks goes by the Allée de l’Accroissement  or sort of increasing alley that begins in the south on the avenue de la Division-Leclerc and ends around 1,600 meters north on the allée de la Ceinture or sort of belt aisle. Great walks indeed to dream while seeing the palace afar.

Versailles allée de l’Accroissement off l’étoile royale

the Allée de Saint-Cyr begins by the allée de l’Accroissement and ends around 1,900 meters on the allée du Rendez-Vous or sort of meeting aisle. At the corner of this alley it offers a real panorama of the domaine/estate. The tall oak trees then the large agricultural plots are stretched afar, perceives the waters of the Ru of Gally stream, and finally the alignments of linden trees which announce the Étoile royale or royal star, more than a km from our point of view.

Versailles allée de Saint-Cyr, to l’Étoile royale

The Passage de l’Abbé Picard sits between the Allée Pierre de Coubertinet and the avenue de Paris, A nice historical corner of my Versailles for a nice walk in history, Jean Picard, aka Abbé or Father Picard, was a geodesian and a French astronomer. The cadran or solar dial of Jean Picard are on the pediment of the Sorbonne in Paris. The three solar dials that Picard calculated for the “old sorbonne” court of honor in 1676 show his interest in the Gnomonique and allowed him to put his theories into practice.

Versailles passage de l'Abbé Picard, by lycée La Bruyère

Something in the City of Versailles, worth the walk to it away from the palace is the hill or butte Montbauron culminating above 150 meters. During the drilling of the 3 large avenues in 1664 (avenue de Saint-Cloud, avenue de Paris and avenue de Sceaux), the Butte Montbauron barred what became avenue de Paris and a part was leveled in 1670 in order to extend the perspective towards the castle. The Montbauron hill was then locked up from a wall fence of around 2000 meters. Five doors gave access to it by different sides. The summit remained unexploited until the realization of Montbauron basins in 1685, intended to supply water to the fountains of the Château of Versailles gardens. The project of the Marly machine (see post) had taken place on June 13, 1684 in the presence of Louis XIV. The Pont-Aqueduc or water bridge) led water to the reservoirs of Louveciennes and Marly, then to Versailles by an underground aqueduct. The water arrived by the Butte de Picardie (now not in service) to finally arrive at the Montbauron basin by a bridge-aqueduc. Of these four tanks, only two remain and only one is still assigned to feed the palace. From the avenue de Saint-Cloud, by the Chemin du Janicule climbs the hill with narrow ramps. At the top of the butte Montbauron hill, you can admire luxurious and imposing houses with millstone facades, as well as a series of pretty villas with facades with colored ceramic friezes. Indeed gorgeous Versailles in the Montreuil neighborhood.

Versailles Réservoirs Montbauron

The official Château de Versailles on the park: https://en.chateauversailles.fr/discover/estate/park

The official Versailles tourist office on the domaine’ park : https://www.versailles-tourisme.com/parc-du-chateau-de-versailles.html

The little city newspaper , Le Petit Versaillais to know all about Versailles before coming : http://www.lepetitversaillais.fr/

The Les Amis de Versailles or the friends of Versailles on its future activities (I am in!) : https://www.amisdeversailles.com/activities

The association des Amis du grand Parc de Versailles or assoc of the friends of the grand park of Versailles (domaine): https://grandparcdeversailles.org/accueil-agpv/histoire-grand-parc-versailles-agpv/

There you go folks, as said, this property is huge, you need more than the popularly mention one or two days,these posts will give you some ideas and history to search for more and really enjoy fully my Versailles. If you need further details or information, feel free to post a question or contact me on this blog. I lived there for 9+ glorious years !!! Again, hope you enjoy the post on the Domaine de Versailles, part III !!!  as I. 

And remember, happy travels, good health, and many cheers to all !!!

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.