Olivier Delourme, nicknamed "the architect of Brittany", was a French architect of the "Grand Siècle" renowned for his many achievements still existing, mainly in Morbihan.
Biography
Delourme was born in 1660 in the village of Kerpiton to Jean Delourme and Françoise Launay, a family of literate master masons living in a tenant farm. Many family members were court officers, priests or clerics. Olivier and his brothers, people with education, decided to be builders and began as masons, then master masons. Louis XIV having had the Parliament of Brittany transferred to Vannes in 1675, the councillors had private mansions built there, villas then attracting many building workers. Olivier Delourme moved there when he was not yet 25 years old. He became a materials trader, but also a shipowner and writer of construction treaties. At the same time, he trained as an architect, then master architect and was gradually recognized for his work. He was involved in public works, city architecture, religious monuments, and prestigious private residences. He married Jeanne Caillot, the daughter of one of his companions with whom he settled at the Manoir du Grador and had many children. He died prematurely in 1729, not seeing the completion of all his projects.
Realisations
Urban works
In Vannes, his achievements are numerous, both as master architect designer and master builder of works. He also helped to reduce the gap between these two tasks. In particular, he was ordered plans for the steps of the old town hall, as well as the redevelopment of the canal towards the port.
The de Coëtlogon family, which included illustrious military, judicial and religious officers, bought the Château de Loyat in 1676. René-Charles de Coëtlogon, attorney general-syndic, decided to build a new castle and called on Olivier Delourme as architect, designer and director. The work spread out between 1718 and 1734. The other main work by Delourme is the Château of Kerguéhennec in Bignan. The Hogguer family of St. Gallen, in Switzerland, traders in paintings and finances, investing in Lorient in the French East India Company, called on Olivier Delourme to rebuild Kerguéhennec. But their ephemeral fortune forced them to sell the property to in 1732.