Renaissance of the Gardens of Versailles
After violent storms destroyed thousands of trees in 1999, fears of disaster eased when the cleanup revealed panoramas unseen for centuries, fitting neatly into a 25-year restoration plan
- By Richard Covington
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2001, Subscribe
Under leaden skies, Laurent Choffé is rallying his troops. Choffé’s team of gardeners, landscape architects and metalworkers are racing to put the finishing touches on the restored Bosquet du Dauphin, one of the oldest groves at Versailles. Sunk in mud up to their calves, a pair of sweating workers struggle to maneuver a heavy section of pipe to fit it into the fountain. After watching them slip, slide, heave and get nowhere, Choffé suggests they take a break. As a light rain starts to fall, he turns to the crew to discuss the urgent matter at hand—where to set up the tables for the pot (pronounced "po"), the traditional workers’ celebration, marking the grove’s completion. What if the rain delays the event, I ask. Will there still be a pot?
Choffé shoots me a quizzical look. "Mais oui, Monsieur, le pot est sacré!" he says with a Gallic shrug and tongue firmly in cheek. It’s vintage Versailles; even if the weather won’t cooperate, the restoration—and the fete—must go on.
The wrestling match between man and nature is an old, old story at Versailles, the former seat of French kings, 13 miles west of Paris. In the 17th century, Louis XIV, the Sun King, created the perfectly trimmed, geometric garden to show his control not simply over his subjects but over nature itself. Versailles sets the standard for the formal French style, with its rigidly linear Cartesian perspectives, clipped hornbeam hedges, flower beds of curlicue greenery and exuberantly baroque fountains, sprouting gilded gods, frogs and cherubs.
Gone with the winds
When 105 mile-per-hour winds ripped through the park in December 1999, uprooting 10,000 trees and peeling away the château’s lead roofing, it looked as if nature were wreaking her revenge. Trees planted at the end of the 18th century, when Marie Antoinette was playing the amorous shepherdess in her jewel-box theater, were flattened. A cherished Corsican pine, planted when Napoleon ruled—in reality, a remarkably chintzy emperor when it came to gardens—was gone with the wind. Roots four times as tall as a man were yanked from the earth, leaving craters the size of small swimming pools. The government brought in army crews from as far away as New Caledonia and French Guiana to help the 50 staff gardeners.
Although I live close to Versailles, I was away with my family in Nuremberg during the storm. Even there, some 500 miles to the east, the winds scythed down forests and gnarled umbrellas into wire sculptures. When we returned home, we were dismayed to see that two-dozen roof tiles had blown away and that our neighbor’s 50-foot pine had demolished a stone wall in our backyard. (This was no great loss: the pine was shading our terrace, and we wanted it gone anyway.) We counted ourselves lucky. Across France, 90 people were killed in the tempest that destroyed some 741,000 acres of forest.
When I visited Versailles shortly afterward, I was stunned by what I saw. Many of the graceful gardens and secluded groves looked like logging camps; bonfires dotted the landscape, and pungent smoke from burning green timber wafted across the chill air. Bulldozers and backhoes executed a clumsy, deafening ballet where the various Louises and their courtiers had once intrigued and gamboled. Wide swathes of the park were closed to the public as gardeners-turned-lumberjacks labored to clear away the fallen trees.
Jacques "Jacky" Durand, one of those gardeners, has tended the rambling woods of Trianon park and the mock-farming village of the queen’s Hamlet for nearly 25 years and knew every tree. Months after the storm, Durand, a trim, soft-spoken man, still winces as he recalls his first day back at work.
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Comments (1)
Indeed very nice post . I am also associated with to Tri-State Restoration Services ,I really love to read the most latest and informative content on this subject over the web. I just came across your blog and found it so good that I have subscribed the same. And I hope you will be posting this sort of stuff for the guys like us and others over the coming days. Thanks
Posted by Covington restoration on February 8,2012 | 05:29 AM