Following the opinion in favour of the protection given by the Regional Commission for Heritage and Sites (CRPS) meeting Tuesday, January 27, 2015, to the Regional Directorate of Cultural Affairs, Jean-François Cordet, Prefect of the Northern Region – Pas-de Calais, Prefect of the North signed on 20 and 30 March 2015 the inscription orders for the historical monuments of the following monuments.

Thechurch of Saint Vincent de PaulLocated in the district of Capécure in Boulogne-sur-Mer, was built by Yves Laloy from 1951 to 1961 as part of the reconstruction of the city after the destruction of the war. Representative of the renewal of sacred art in the second half of the XXe century, it presents a set of remarkable stained glass windows made by the Bolt Henry Lhotellier. After obtaining a Heritage label of XXe in 2009, it was therefore fully registered.

Theprivate mansion, located 2 rue Notre-Dame/17 Place de la Préfecture in Arras, follows a canonical house. It tells an urban history of the city from the Roman castrum to the damages of the Great War, including the medieval architecture of its cellars, the presence of the ancient Episcopal City and the habitat of the notables of the July Monarchy. The inscription concerns the facades and roofs of the private mansion and all its cellars, its fence wall, its paved courtyard and its garden.

Theformer abbey of Mont-Saint-Eloi is a testimony of a major religious institution of the Ancien Régime whose towers have been classified since 1921. The recent excavations carried out by the archaeological service of the General Council of Pas-de-Calais have revealed important elements of the successive abbeys of the Middle Ages and the modern era. On the other hand, a broader study of the old abbey enclosure has highlighted the presence of numerous remains, notably the surrounding walls. A global harmonization of the protection has therefore been decided with the inscription in the whole of the ground and the basement of the former abbey enclosure with all its vestiges and the following elements in elevation: retaining walls and fence inside and outside with their portals, remains of the main entrance gate.

Protected monuments are monitored by the Regional Conservation of Historic Monuments (Regional Directorate of Cultural Affairs).