UDAP of Seine-et-Marne
UDAP de la Seine-et-Marne is a service of the Regional Directorate of Cultural Affairs (DRAC) of Île de France. The Seine-et-Marne department is the largest department of Île-de-France (5,915 km2) and represents half the area of the region. The mission of UDAP 77 is threefold: to advise and promote quality urban planning and architecture, to monitor and evaluate projects carried out in protected areas and to ensure the conservation of historic monuments.
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Our missions
- Regulatory Notices on Protected Space Projects (Listed and Classified Sites, Historic Monuments Area, SPR)
- Advise and promote quality urban planning and architecture (local advertising regulations, wind projects, PLU, SCOT)
- To encourage contemporary architecture that integrates harmoniously into its built or natural environment.
- To ensure scientific and technical control over the ABF historical monuments, which are the custodians of listed historical monuments belonging to the Ministry of Culture. For the Seine-et-Marne: castle of Fontainebleau, cathedral of Meaux, archaeological site of Pincevent and convent of Cordelières in Provins.
The department
Located east of Paris, it is crossed by major road infrastructures (A4, A5 motorways, etc.), river (the Seine, the Marne, the Loing) and railways. The primarily agricultural landscape (80% cultivated area) embraces a territory marked by a cultural, heritage and artistic dimension and which presents many high-quality urban complexes
A predominantly agricultural economy. The trays, whether they are occupied by the intensive cultivation of cereals or beets or whether they are covered with afforestation, mainly in the Brie and around Fontainebleau, are cut through many valleys that reach the Seine and the Marne. The East and the South define rural areas par excellence and have several medium-sized cities of 15 to 50,000 inhabitants (Meaux, Melun, Coulommiers, Moret, Montereau) and two new towns (Melun-Sénart and Marne-la-Vallée) 16% of the inhabitants of the department. The West - more urbanized in the extension of the small crown (Chelles, Marne la Vallée) – reveals an area under development. The Seine-et-Marne, with 130,000 hectares of forests, is finally the green lung of the Île-de-France.
The cultural, heritage and artistic dimensionNinety-three sites – classified or listed - attest to the quality of the Seine-et-Marne landscape.
The emblematic estates of Vaux-le-Vicomte - whose success is the work of the architect Le Vau, the painter-decorator Le Brun and the gardener-landscaper - Le Nôtre or de Champs-sur-Marne - built between 1703 and 1706 for two financiers of Louis XIV - symbolize this territory whose cultural and artistic dimension was affirmed throughout the nineteenth century. The multiplication of artist villages is the testimony today.
With two UNESCO World Heritage sites, the Fontainebleau Castle and Park (1981) and the city of Provins (2001), the Seine-et-Marne also has a Biosphere Reserve, granted by the same international organization to the Pays de Fontainebleau (1998).
Your interlocutors
Fontainebleau site
Secretariat.sdap77@culture.gouv.fr
Head of Department – Architect of the Buildings of France: Mr Jean-Louis AUGER
- Head of Department – Architect of the Buildings of France: Mr Jean-Louis AUGER
- Architect: Mr Noé BODART
- General Affairs Officer: Ms Fabienne TOUVET
- In charge of heritage conservation and restoration: Mr Clément CAUDON
- Home/ Secretariat Mrs: Christelle BERLIN/ Mrs Sophie GUÉRIN
Champs-sur-Marne site
- Architect of the buildings of France N.
Archaeological site of Pincevent
- Reception and surveillance officers: Mr Eddy DUNOYand Marie VERGUES
ContactsFontainebleau siteSully Pavilion – Place de Boisdyver 77300 Fontainebleau Tel: 01 60 74 50 20 Arrondissements de Melun, de Fontainebleau, de Provins et CC Les Portes Briardes (Ardt de Torcy) CC de l'Orée de La Brie (Ardt de Torcy) |
To download, UDAP Practice Sheet 77
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