AudaTours logoAudaTours

Stop 11 of 17

Hôtel de Ville de Lyon

Hôtel de Ville de Lyon
Hôtel de Ville, Lyon
Hôtel de Ville, LyonPhoto: Kent Wang, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0. Cropped & resized.

On your right, the Hôtel de Ville shows itself as a long pale ashlar-stone façade with a square central doorway, orderly rows of windows, and a domed clock belfry rising above the relief of King Henry the Fourth.

From across the square, you can see exactly what Lyon wanted this building to say in the seventeenth century: we are rich, organized, and very much worth noticing. The city chose this site as the Presqu'île became the new center, and in a nice bit of political choreography, leaders began construction on the fifth of September, sixteen forty-six... the birthday of Louis the Fourteenth. Architect Simon Maupin gave them a balanced front of nine bays, with the end sections pushed forward like pavilions on a palace. Even city government, it turns out, likes a good entrance.

Look at the middle: that doorway framed by Ionic columns, the straight, scroll-topped classical kind, sets up the whole performance. Above it, the façade climbs in careful layers toward the belfry. If you open the interior image on your screen, the ceremonial rooms show how the drama continued inside, not just out here on the square.

The Salle des Fêtes in 1915, one of the ceremonial interiors decorated in the grand tradition of Lyon’s city hall.
The Salle des Fêtes in 1915, one of the ceremonial interiors decorated in the grand tradition of Lyon’s city hall.Photo: Opérateur Z (code armée)., Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.

Louis the Fourteenth himself came here on the second of December, sixteen fifty-eight, for a grand reception. Here is the part locals enjoy: the place still wasn’t truly finished. The king and court stepped into a glittering civic welcome... with dust and construction debris still hanging around the brand-new town hall. Then the city forgot to provide chairs. The evening became famous as the great banquet where nobody sat down. That’s Lyon in one scene: ambitious, stylish, and just a little improvised.

But this polished face nearly vanished. On the thirteenth of September, sixteen seventy-four, fire broke out in the Great Hall after weeks of dryness had left the timber frame brittle as kindling. The heat turned savage. Bells in the tower melted, and molten metal ran downward. Carpenters made a brutal choice: they hacked through burning roof timbers to separate the doomed hall from the rest of the building and save the archives and the southern wing. That desperate act helps explain the French phrase about “giving the fire its share” - cutting your losses to save what matters most.

Afterward, Jules Hardouin-Mansart and Robert de Cotte reshaped the building. The high original roofs disappeared; in their place came the lower balustrades, statues, and the skyline you see now. If you like, take a quick look at the before-and-after image - it shows how the restored west front shed its scaffolding and came back into full civic dress.

And then the politics changed again. In seventeen ninety-three, revolutionaries destroyed the bronze relief of Louis the Fourteenth. Later, the city chose Henry the Fourth for the replacement above you, a safer king for a wounded city. This façade remembers power, but it also remembers editing power.

That’s the real turn here: this is not just a town hall. It is a stage set rewritten by monarchs, fire, revolutionaries, and restorers, all trying to control the same view across the same square. In eighteen seventy, a crowd even proclaimed the Republic here hours before Paris did, and for months a red flag flew over the building.

When you’re ready, head for Saint-Nizier, about five minutes away. There, continuity feels less official, more argued over... and much older.

The belfry by Mansart, part of the restored skyline after the great fire, later recognized in the UNESCO Belfries of Belgium and France group.
The belfry by Mansart, part of the restored skyline after the great fire, later recognized in the UNESCO Belfries of Belgium and France group.Photo: ChatPardeur, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
A closer look at the belfry rising above the Hôtel de Ville, the feature that crowns the rebuilt façade today.
A closer look at the belfry rising above the Hôtel de Ville, the feature that crowns the rebuilt façade today.Photo: Acediscovery, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0. Cropped & resized.
An 1832 engraving of the façade facing Place des Terreaux, showing how the city hall looked in the 19th century.
An 1832 engraving of the façade facing Place des Terreaux, showing how the city hall looked in the 19th century.Photo: Théodore Basset de Jolimont, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
Historic engraving of the façade toward Place de la Comédie, matching the building’s position opposite the opera and square.
Historic engraving of the façade toward Place de la Comédie, matching the building’s position opposite the opera and square.Photo: Théodore Basset de Jolimont, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
Old postcard of Place des Terreaux with the Hôtel de Ville, capturing the civic setting that became a stage for revolutionary events.
Old postcard of Place des Terreaux with the Hôtel de Ville, capturing the civic setting that became a stage for revolutionary events.Photo: Forcioly, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
1985 restoration work on the west façade, with scaffolding around the relief of Henry IV that replaced the destroyed Louis XIV image.
1985 restoration work on the west façade, with scaffolding around the relief of Henry IV that replaced the destroyed Louis XIV image.Photo: Jacques Gastineau, photographe aux Archives de Lyon, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
Close view of the restoration around the Henry IV bas-relief, a reminder of the façade’s political history after the Revolution.
Close view of the restoration around the Henry IV bas-relief, a reminder of the façade’s political history after the Revolution.Photo: Jacques Gastineau, photographe aux Archives de Lyon, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
Interior courtyard engraving from 1832, showing the grand central court that organized the palace-like town hall.
Interior courtyard engraving from 1832, showing the grand central court that organized the palace-like town hall.Photo: Théodore Basset de Jolimont, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
Another view into the great courtyard from the entrance, useful for explaining the building’s symmetrical layout.
Another view into the great courtyard from the entrance, useful for explaining the building’s symmetrical layout.Photo: Théodore Basset de Jolimont, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
The Cour Haute, one of the building’s main inner courtyards, reflecting the scale of this vast historic city hall.
The Cour Haute, one of the building’s main inner courtyards, reflecting the scale of this vast historic city hall.Photo: Prométhée, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
The mayor’s office inside the Hôtel de Ville, linking the building’s historic architecture to its continuing civic role.
The mayor’s office inside the Hôtel de Ville, linking the building’s historic architecture to its continuing civic role.Photo: Prométhée33, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
Nighttime Festival of Lights view, showing how the Hôtel de Ville becomes a city landmark in modern Lyon celebrations.
Nighttime Festival of Lights view, showing how the Hôtel de Ville becomes a city landmark in modern Lyon celebrations.Photo: SashiRolls, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
arrow_back Back to Lyon Audio Tour: Historic Heritage
Loved by travellers

Thousands of tours started.
Plenty of opinions.

4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.

starstarstarstarstar
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Christoph
Christoph
Brighton Tour
starstarstarstarstar
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.
download Get the app

Pop your headphones in.
Step outside.

Free to download. Tours in every city. Start in 60 seconds — no account, no card.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
starstarstarstarstar_half
4.8
AudaTours app icon
headphones
~ 4 min until your first tour starts
public
1,000+ cities worldwide
all_inclusive
AudaTours
Unlimited

Every tour. Every city. One subscription.

3097 tours2273 cities138 countries50+ languages