Vieille-Chapelle Church
At the end of the Great War the areas in Northern France which were devastated by the fighting were designated zones rouges (lit. 'red zones'), and these included all the towns and village on the Front. The areas immediately behind the Front were given the lesser classification of zone orange, such as the urban areas that, although relatively unscathed for most of the war, were severely damaged during the Battle of the Lys in April 1918. Notable examples were Bailleul, Béthune and Vieille-Chapelle.
After the Armistice, architects Louis Quételart and Pierre Ragois were called in by Louis-Marie Cordonnier, supervisor of the reconstruction on Lys Plain, to redesign the town of Méteren and Vieille-Chapelle. A recently-qualified architect by the name of André Pavlovsky was soon to join them. After the withdrawal of Ragois, Quételart and Pavlovsky went on to design Vieille-Chapelle Church in 1924.
An 'exotic' church on Lys Plain
The style of the church bears some resemblance to the design of the beach villas in Le Touquet-Paris-Plage (the shape of the roof at the back) and various edifices in the Basque Country (Basque Crosses on the lintel above the entrance). The reason for this can be found in the origins of the architects.
Louis Quételart, born in Berck in 1988, was a self-taught architect who began his career in a design office at the age of nineteen. Lacking sufficient formal education, Quételart was a late entrant to the French Order of Architects (admitted in 1941) despite being responsible for about one hundred houses in Le Touquet which, by their sheer number, give the seaside town its character. He also designed the public benches backed with flower beds, which can be seen around the town and on the beach, and Le Touquet lighthouse which opened in 1945. As for André Pavlovsky, he was a Parisian of Russian origin who had studied fine arts and architecture before settling in the Basque Country after the Reconstruction to build, like his former colleague, many seaside homes and two lighthouses in Saint-Jean-de-Luz.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Rue du Feu d'Etrein - 62136 VIEILLE-CHAPELLE
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DE BÉTHUNE-BRUAY
Call: +33 (0)3 21 52 50 00
Website: www.tourisme-bethune-bruay.fr

























































































































































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