EXHIBITION THE BUILDERS OF THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE IN THE 20th CENTURY

This exhibition retraced the evolution of the Faculty of Medicine's buildings and sites (the Bâtiment Historique, the Institut de Biologie, the Nîmes and Arnaud de Villeneuve campuses and the Jardin des Plantes) since November 1921, the date of the VIIth centenary celebrations in the presence of Alexandre Millerand, President of the French Republic.

This evolution, which includes the upkeep, renovation and even extension of buildings and sites, is a long-term undertaking supported by successive deans. In the context of the Faculty of Medicine, safeguarding this heritage in line with the modernization of medical teaching is an important aspect of their dean's duties.

1705

visitors

100

years of history

11

deans between 1920 and 2020

Emblematic work on downtown buildings

They began in the 1930s with the extension of the Institute of Biology, inaugurated in 1884. Following the liberation, major restoration work was undertaken, and a new extension built between 1958 and 1959 gave the building its current appearance.

At the Bâtiment Historique, work proceeded in quick succession in the 1950s : demolition of the avants corps, complete restoration of the main facade and re-roofing of the southern and western wings, renovation of the anatomy amphitheatre, three successive phases of work in the library, replacement of the old anatomy pavilion with a three-storey building, restoration of the Dugès room, installation of a new commemorative plaque in the atrium, creation of a walkway and protective glass roof in the cedar courtyard and installation of new display cases in the Atger museum.

In the 1980s, many of the ground-floor rooms were stripped (from the Dugès room to the Fonds Jaumes room). The Tekné Makré rooms were fitted with furniture to house the books in the collection bearing the name.

The early 2000s saw a new restoration of the Salle des Actes, renovation of the roofs of the Theatrum anatomicum and fitting out of the Delmas - Orfila - Rouvière exhibition rooms.

Extensions in Nîmes and on the Montpellier North site

Despite the extension of the Biology Institute at the end of the 1950s, space was again rapidly running out to accommodate the growing number of students.

In 1968, a branch was set up in Nîmes. Initially housed in the former Collège de l'Assomption, it moved to its current site in 1972. Renovation and expansion work is currently underway.

In Montpellier, a1st extension project to the north of the city was drawn up in 1959. However, it wasn't until the 1990s that the Faculty of Medicine began constructing buildings there, gradually creating a new site: firstly, the Unité Pédagogique Médicale (UPM), inaugurated in January 1993, then the Institut Universitaire de Recherche Clinique (IURC) in 1996.

Many years of reflection and negotiation would be needed to see the new building project come to fruition. The latter was inaugurated on October 12, 2017, in the presence of Frédérique Vidal, Minister of Higher Education and Research. The implementation of a pedagogy geared towards new practices, technological innovations, multi-professionalism and the development of the human dimension of care are the objectives behind the design of this building.

Jardin des Plantes

The Jardin des Plantes changed little during the first half of the 20th century. The key event was its requisition in 1943 by the Kriegsmarine and its inclusion in the passive defense system in Languedoc.

After the Liberation, war indemnities enabled the new director Hervé Harant to undertake major restorations, starting with filling in the cistern, planting trees and repairing the benches on the Montagne de Richer. This was followed by the destruction of the large Planchon greenhouse and the construction of the small Planchon greenhouses in 1956, the installation of rock gardens near the Institut de Botanique in 1958, the replacement of the Martins greenhouse in 1959, and the revision of the Garden's statuary between 1962 and 1969.

In 1982 and 1993, the Jardin des Plantes was successively classified as a "protected site" and then as a "historic monument". A new turning point came at the very beginning of the 2000s with the preparation of a preliminary restoration survey. The first two have now been completed: the restoration of the Martins greenhouse and the adjoining technical platform, and the renovation of the systematic school and its surroundings, with the development of the Planchon site and the complete restoration of the orangery.

Vestiges discovered

During construction work, some remains were found:
the outer west wall of the former monastery,
the machicolation of the Théophraste Renaudot hall,
part of the town's communal fence, and an underground
an underground room named Urbain V
due to the presence of a keystone bearing
bearing the Pope's coat of arms.

An unsolved mystery

In 1941, one of Dean Giraud's first actions
was to hide the bronze statues of Lapeyronie and Barthez
of Lapeyronie and Barthez - installed in 1864 - to avoid
to prevent them being requisitioned by German
and melted down. They were
replaced in 1946. The location of their
was undoubtedly a well-kept mystery
mystery... so much so that it remains so to this day!

Dean Giraud (1888-1975)

Originally from Ardèche, Gaston Giraud came to Montpellier
medical studies in Montpellier. Dean from 1941 to 1960, he played a major role
in Montpellier's medical life,
notably at the propaedeutic clinic of the Hôpital Général
from 1934 to 1937, then at the Clinique Médicale B
of the St Eloi suburban hospital, between 1938 and 1960.
Most of the photos presented in this exhibition
are taken from the iconographic collection he created, which
bequeathed to the university by his two daughters.

Practical info

Exhibition: the builders of the Faculty of Medicine in the 20th century

Exhibition presented from June 18 to July 21, 2021 by the University of Montpellier and the Faculty of Medicine as part of the Faculty's 8th centenary celebrations.

Exhibition booklet :

Photo gallery

Click on the image opposite to discover archive photos of the Faculty!