Page 26 - Livre Beau Rivage Palace
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Fig. 1                                                                                                                                         Fig. 2                                                  Fig. 3

                                   OUCHY: THE CREATION OF                                                                                                d’Angleterre in 1868, was the work of the architect Abraham   of Ouchy presented a list of grievances. They wanted the bay to
                                                                                                                                                         Fraisse. The central body was surmounted by a clock and a turret
                                                                                                                                                                                                                 be dredged, the shore cleared of clutter and the customs house
                                          A HOLIDAY RESORT                                                                                               which would be replaced in 1880 by a partial attic storey.  To the   pulled down because it deprived some houses of a very fine
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                                                                                                                                                         east of the site, in 1802-03 the architect Alexandre Perregaux   view of the lake. Besides, they claimed, it no longer served any
                                                                                                                                                         built a mansion which is now the Hôtel Résidence.  He placed   useful purpose since the introduction of a common market for
                                                                                                                                                                                                    5
                                                                                                                                                         it at right angles to the lake because the view across the lake   the whole of Switzerland had considerably reduced the volume
                                                                                                                                                         was obstructed by Ouchy’s vast customs building. The bonded   of goods passing through customs. They feared that tourists might
                                                                                                                                                         warehouse with its imposing roof in the style of the great French   prefer Montreux to Lausanne and that the railway, then still at
                                                                                                                                                         Classical architect François Mansart had been rebuilt in several   the planning stage, would have an adverse effect on lake transport.
                                                                                                                                                         stages between 1713 and 1784.                           The local authorities finally responded with a plan to develop the
                                                                                                                                                             The villagers did not share the opulent lifestyle of their rich   waterfront, which was formally adopted at the beginning of 1856.
                                                                                                                                                         new neighbours. They struggled to earn a living from the lake while   The plan, drawn up by Georges Krieg, architect, entrepreneur and
                                                    Joëlle NEUENSCHWANDER FEIHL
                                                                                                                                                         bemoaning the inadequacies of the dock, which was constantly   local councillor, envisaged a large wharf jutting out into the lake
         THE PORT OF LAUSANNE                                     conjunction with other military installations, since documents                         silted up because it lacked proper protection. There was nothing   to the south and southwest of the castle and intended primarily for
              The town of Ouchy probably came into being at the end   dated 1283 mention a  castrum,  or fortress.  After the Bernese                    particularly attractive about the place, and while contemporary   storing goods. Meanwhile the Canton of Vaud, as owner of both
          of the third century when the inhabitants of a settlement called   conquest of Vaud, the castle became the property of the conquerors          guidebooks proclaimed the beauty of the surrounding countryside,  castle and embankment, decided to create a project of its own, thus
          Lousonna on the shores of the lake at Vidy started to build homes   who continued to use it for defensive purposes until 1617, when            all they could say about Ouchy was that it had a tower and that,  blocking the realisation of the local council’s plans. In fact, Ouchy
          on the hill where the Cité now stands, a position far easier to defend.  the treaty ending the war with Savoy was signed. After this, its walls   in June 1816, Byron and Shelley had stayed at the Logis d’Ouchy,  was caught in the crossfire of a tense political battle between the
          Harbour activities moved from Vidy to Ouchy, where a small bay,  and buildings gradually fell into ruin, apart from the tower, which           where the latter wrote The Prisoner of Chillon. 6       liberal local council and the cantonal government whose radical
          closer to the new town, provided shelter to boats. At the end of the   was used as a grain store. At the end of the seventeenth century                                                                majority preferred to follow through with the policies on which
          sixth century, the headquarters of the diocese was transferred from   the village consisted of only around twenty buildings, including         THE FIRST IMPROVEMENTS                                  it had been elected.
         Avenches to Lausanne, which was then placed under the spiritual   the Logis d’Ouchy, an inn built in 1572 (fig. 1). There was no solid              The advent of steam navigation raised the profile of the little      In the end it would be a private company, whose interim
          and temporal rule of the bishop of Lausanne. From 1032, those   structure to protect the harbour and it was not until 1793 that, in            village, which would become one of the Vaudois capital’s main   board was set up in late winter 1856, that would be responsible
          appointed to the post became prince-bishops of the Holy Roman   response to the many requests and petitions from boatmen and                   ports. The first steamboat took to the water at Geneva in 1823,  for carrying out the work the villagers had demanded, and for
         Empire. Lausanne was ideally situated at the crossroads of several   residents of Ouchy, the Lausanne authorities built a jetty south-east      followed by a second a year later. Lausanne launched its own vessel   developing a lakeside promenade and a first-class hotel. Its members,
          major routes and soon became a centre of pilgrimage. The town   of the castle, to which a quay would be added in 1795 (fig. 2). 2              in 1826. Travellers who preferred to take the boat, which was   drawn from the banking, business and legal worlds, were all active
          continued to grow in size and reputation until the beginning of      From 1770 onwards, imposing buildings, first in the                       faster and more comfortable than the stagecoach, passed through   members of the Liberal Party.  Some were members of the
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          the thirteenth century when it started slowly to decline.  Baroque and then in the Neoclassical style, began to appear on                      Ouchy in increasing numbers. Until 1853, when the landing   cantonal or local legislature – in some cases both – and hence in an
              Known as Rive or Rive d’Oschie in the Middle Ages, the   the outskirts of the hamlet. Most of them were country houses,                    stage was built, passengers were brought ashore by raft.  After   excellent position to bridge the gap between town and canton and
          hamlet of Ouchy came under the parish of the cathedral and hence   summer residences where wealthy foreigners or members of the                disembarking they found it difficult to clamber around the goods   to bring negotiations to a successful conclusion. These men were
          belonged to the bishop. Its port expanded but never reached the   local nobility could entertain friends from far and near. Among              stored on the quay – mainly construction materials such as timber,  passionate advocates of technological progress and, in order to
          size of Morges, Villeneuve or Geneva which were trans-shipment   those mansions along the lake that were built or refurbished                  stone and sand – and pick their way past boats lying high and   compensate for the lack of public sector funding, they encouraged
          points for goods and passengers. Nevertheless, Landry de Durnes,  during this period were L’Élysée (in 1780-83), Bellerive (in 1787),          dry and all sorts of chains and cables, not to mention laundresses   private companies to become involved in building infrastructures.
          bishop of Lausanne from 1159 until around 1177, built a defensive   Fantaisie (in 1792-93), Souvenir (in 1801-02) and Denantou (in             washing clothes and fishermen mending their nets (fig. 3). In vain,  Their dealings with both sides were quickly crowned with success.
          tower there.  Partly destroyed in 1207 by Thomas de Maurienne,  1818-20).  At Ouchy itself, Lausanne’s town council rebuilt the                Ouchy’s elected representatives pleaded for improvements to be   On 14 May 1857, the Grand Conseil, or cantonal parliament,
                                                                          3
                   1
          count of Savoy, the tower was rebuilt before 1212, probably in   inn in 1775. The Baroque building, which became the Hôtel                     made to the waterfront area. In 1853, a meeting of the citizens   unanimously agreed to a ruling under which the canton bore
          Cadastral map, showing boundaries and ownership of land within                                                                                 Yves Dulat, Ouchy Harbour. Watercolour and pencil, 1816.  Ouchy Harbour. Photograph, 1849-57.
          the village of Ouchy, drawn up by Pierre and Jean-Philippe Rebeur 1674-79.
          The Logis d’Ouchy, east of the village, can be identified by its small turret.


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