
The entrance to the Élysée Palace.
''
Elysée redirects here. For the car with the same name, see
Citroën Elysée.''
The 'Élysée Palace' (''Palais de l'Élysée'', located 55,
rue du faubourg Saint-Honoré, 75008
Paris, not far from the
Champs-Élysées), is the official residence of the
President of the French Republic, where the president's office is located, and the Council of Ministers meets.
Important foreign visitors are hosted at the nearby
Hôtel de Marigny (not a
hotel in the English sense, but a palatial residence.) The Élysee has large gardens, in which the president hosts a party on the afternoon of
Bastille Day.
History

The hall of festivities during the 1990
CSCE conference.
The architect Armand-Claude Mollet possessed a property fronting on the road to the village of Roule, west of Paris (now the Rue de Faubourg Saint-Honoré), and backing onto royal property, the ''Grand Cours'' through the
Champs-Élysées. He sold this in
1718 to Henri-Louis de
la Tour d'Auvergne, comte d'Évreux, with the agreement that Mollet would construct an ''hôtel particulier'' for the count, fronted by an entrance court and backed by a garden. The ''Hôtel d'Évreux'' was finished and decorated by
1722, and though it has undergone many modifications since, it remains a fine example of classic Régence style. At the time of his death in
1753, Évreux was the owner of one of the most widely admired houses in Paris, and it was bought by King
Louis XV as a residence for the
Marquise de Pompadour, his mistress. Opponents showed their distaste for the regime by hanging signs on the gates that read: "Home of the King's whore".
During the
French Revolution and the
Napoleonic Wars, the building receded in importance, becoming a furniture warehouse, then a print factory, then a dance hall.
Russian Cossacks camped at the Élysée when they occupied Paris in 1814.
Though it was first officially used by the government of
Napoleon Bonaparte, the Hôtel d'Évreux was formally purchased for
Louis XVIII in
1816. Under the provisional government of the
Second Republic, it took the name of the ''Élysée National'' and was designated the official residence of the President of the Republic. In
1853, following his coup d'état that ended the Republic,
Napoléon III charged the architect Joseph-Eugène Lacroix with renovations and meanwhile moved to the nearby
Tuileries Palace, but kept the Élysée as a discreet place to meet his mistresses, moving between the two palaces through a secret underground passage that has since been destroyed. Since Lacroix completed his work in
1867, the essential look of the ''Palais de l'Élysée'' has remained the same.
After the republic was restored in 1870, the Élysée once more became a presidential residence, but its new occupants maintained the building's racy reputation, particularly President
Félix Faure, who died there suddenly in the arms of his mistress Marguerite Steinheil in
1899. A priest was brought into the Faure's bedroom for the
last rites and inquired: "Does the president still have his "connaissance?", using the term to mean 'consciousness', but the valet understood its other French meaning, 'acquaintance', and answered: "No, we ushered her out by the back door."
During
World War I, a gorilla escaped from a nearby ''
ménagerie'', entered the palace and was said to have tried to haul the wife of President
Raymond Poincaré into a tree only to be foiled by Élysée guards. President
Paul Deschanel, who resigned in
1920 because of madness, was said to have been so impressed by the gorilla's feat that, to the alarm of his guests, he took to jumping into trees during state receptions.
The Élysée was boarded up during
World War II and left empty until after the war. It was then occupied from
1959 to
1969 by the first President of the new
Fifth Republic,
Charles de Gaulle, who frowned on its reputation and lack of privacy. He had another luxurious building purchased nearby so he could receive official state guests there rather than at the Élysée itself. "I do not like the idea of meeting kings walking around my corridors in their pyjamas" he said.
Socialist President
François Mitterrand, who governed from
1981-
1995, is said hardly to have used its private apartments. He preferred returning at night to his own home on the more
bohemian Left Bank, or to a discreet flat in another district occupied by the mother of his illegitimate daughter
Mazarine.
By contrast, his successor
Jacques Chirac lived throughout his two terms in office (
1995-
2007) in the Élysée apartments with his wife
Bernadette.
Chirac increased the Palace's budget by 105% to 90 million euros per year, according to the book 'L'argent caché de l'Élysée'. One million euros per year is spent on drinks alone for the guests invited to the Élysée Palace. 6.9 million euros per year on bonuses for presidential staff, 6.1 million euros per year on the 145 extra employees Chirac hired after he was elected in 1995, and 81,012 euros per year as a salary for the President.
Chirac's successor,
Nicolas Sarkozy, has announced he too will live in the Élysée, but his wife
Cécilia, has expressed doubts about life in the palace. "I don't see myself as a first lady. It bores me. I'm not politically correct," she told an interviewer. It is not known whether she lives there.
The President also has the use of several other official residences, including the
Château de Rambouillet, a few miles outside Paris, and the
Fort de Brégançon near
Marseille.
Bibliography
René Dossieré, 'L'argent cache de l'Elysée', Seuil, 2007
External link
★
Official site of the President of the French Republic
★
Satellite image in Google maps