Calais City Hall

Calais City Hall (French: Mairie de Calais, Hôtel de ville de Calais) is the seat of the city council in Calais, France. It has a 72-metre belfry of red brick and white limestone.

Calais City Hall
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Calais City Hall
LocationCalais, France
Part ofBelfries of Belgium and France
CriteriaCultural: (ii), (iv)
Reference943-048
Inscription1999 (23rd Session)
Extensions2005
Area0.182 ha (0.45 acres)
Buffer zone700 ha (1,700 acres)
Coordinates50°57′09″N 1°51′16″E
Location of Calais City Hall in France

Calls for a new city hall dated from Calais's municipal merger with Saint-Pierre in 1885, and the plan was to put the building in the dunes between the two towns. Louis Debrouwer of Dunkirk was the architect, designing in the Renaissance Revival and Flemish styles. Building began in 1912, was paused during World War I, and concluded in 1925.

In 2003, it was made a monument historique by the French state. In 2005, its belfry was added to the UNESCO World Heritage Site ensemble of the Belfries of Belgium and France.

Les bourgeois de Calais ("The Burghers of Calais") is a sculpture by Auguste Rodin, commissioned by the city and standing in front of the city hall. It depicts the six leading citizens who were taken by Edward III of England after the Siege of Calais (1346–1347) during the Hundred Years' War.

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