How could he have all these houses built? He must have the philosopher's stone.
Comment of Louis XV, reported to Montesquieu (quoted by Pierre Boyé)
As soon as he was installed at Lunéville, Stanislas began work. Every day, the morning was devoted to his favourite pastime: surrounded by his seventeen architects, painters and sculptors, he examined the plans, decided on projects, discussed, ordered, personally directed the construction of his palaces and country houses; he went out to the sites to encourage the workmen, to see the effect of his combinations; he built, demolished, reconstruct and spent the best part of his revenues.
Gaston Maugras, La Cour de Lunéville au xviiie siecle (1904), p.209.
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| The residences of King Stanislas - adapted from Google Maps |
Chanteheux
Stanislas rapidly settled into a fruitful and creative relationship with his architect Emmanuel Héré. In the years 1738 to 1741 the latter embarked on a whole series of projects for his royal master: the château at La Malgrange and the nearby church of Bonsecours (1738-41); the Trèfle (1738) and the Pavillon de la Cascade (1743) at Lunéville; and the Hôtel des Missions in Nancy (1741-43). It was in 1741 too that he began work at Chanteheux to the east of Les Bosquets on an ambitious new pavilion which was to be the Trianon of Stanislas's "Versailles lorrain".