Anatomy Museum

Opened in 1852 for scientific and educational purposes for students, the museum houses a collection of more than 5,600 anatomical specimens. The collection will be on display again in 2027 following six years of restoration.

Built between 1845 and 1852 to house the most exceptional and educationally valuable anatomical specimens—numbering 5,622— it was conceived as a temple to the glory of the sciences applied to medicine, with its immense500-square-meter hall and 10-meter-high ceilings, richly decorated by the painters Baroffi and Montseret.

The conservatory underwent a complete restoration between 2021 and 2026 (the roof, attic, windows and blinds, electrical systems and lighting, masonry, and paintwork—including all the painted decorations at a height of 10 meters)—all of which were secured, rebuilt, or restored.

It is scheduled to reopen in 2027, and you’ll be able to explore it again with the Tourist Office.

The artists restoring the conservatory's ceiling

The anatomical model known as “the digger” by Alphonse Lami, the sculptor of the Barthez statue at the entrance to the Faculty