Private mansions • n°52: Baylet hotel.
Registered MH (2019, facades and roofs, hall, stairwell and garden). The hotel, built in the second half of the 19th century, was enlarged and extensively redeveloped between 1933 and 1934 by the architect Louis Corlouër – nephew of
Fulgence Bienvenüe – at the request of
Jean Baylet. The Baylet hotel, through its interior decorations, is representative of the residences of the Toulouse bourgeoisie of the first half of the 20th century. • n°68-72: Hôtel Léotard, then Pauilhac; headquarters of the
JOB company;
Réseau Canopé of the Toulouse academy. The 72 hosted a voluntary (HB28 bis) and auxiliary (HA301) hospital of the Association of French Ladies (
Red Cross). In 1939, the Polish consulate was located there. • n°76: hôtel Calvet. The hotel was built in 1910 by the architect
Barthélémy Guitard, at the request of Antoine-François Calvet. Industrialist and manufacturer, but also professor at the , he married Juliette Pauilhac who, on the death of her father Léon Pauilhac, director of the
JOB company, received ownership of the house at no. corner of . Antoine-François Calvet had it demolished to build a
Hôtel particulier in the
eclectic Louis XVI style. It consists of a main house, a courtyard and outbuildings located at the back of the courtyard. The elevation on Boulevard de Strasbourg is developed on four levels: a basement, a ground floor, two floors and an attic level. The ground floor, treated in continuous
bossage, is pierced with large
segmental windows. In the right bay, a large
porch, topped with a stone clasp, gives access to the interior courtyard. On the upper floors, the windows are rectangular. On the 1st floor, they are highlighted by a continuous
balcony with stone
balusters, supported by heavy consoles and have carved lintels. On the 2nd floor, they have simple balconies with
wrought iron railings. The elevation is crowned with a
cornice with
dentils and
modillions. The roof, with long pointed sides covered in slate, is lit by bull's-eye skylights.
Other buildings • n°1: building :
Monument historique (1974, facades and roofs). The building was built between the (current n°11) and the Boulevard de Strasbourg, as part of the development of , from 1824 to 1834, on the plans of the architect of the City, . The facade has four bays and rises over five levels (ground floor, mezzanine, two floors and an attic). The ground floor is made up of large arcades of semi-circular shops which alternate with narrower rectangular openings. On the 1st floor, the windows are topped with a
cornice. They no longer have the original
guard rail with terracotta
balusters, replaced by a continuous balcony with its
wrought iron. The 2nd floor windows also have wrought iron guard rail. The elevation is crowned with a cornice topped with an attic band. • n°2: Franklin-Roosevelt Residence. The building was built in the
modern style between 1970 and 1975 by the architect Pierre Lafitte, at the corner of . The construction of the building led to the destruction of the Hôtel Vitry, built by the architect between 1837 and 1843. • n°3: building. • n°6: Le Trianon cinema. • n°10: building. The building was built in 1955 by the architect
Pierre Génard, an architect representative of the
modern movement in Toulouse. The ground floor, occupied during construction by the Métropole garage, has been allocated since 2013 to the Parapharmacie Lafayette. • n°12: headquarter of
Compagnie minière de Carmaux. • n°51: building. • n°67: building ;
Algerian consulate. The building was built in 1862, at the corner of rue de l'Arc, by the architect Dominique Petit in 1862. It was raised two floors later. Since March 2013, the building, acquired and renovated by the
Algerian state, has housed the Algerian consulate in Toulouse. • n°71-73: Czulowski building (1966-1967, Bernard Bachelot).
Kiosk The kiosk was built between 1931 and 1932 to plans by , for . It was moved in the 1950s and now stands at the corner of Boulevard de Strasbourg, and . It is representative of the
Art Deco style that the architect developed at this time. It is built of
reinforced concrete, but covered with a light coating imitating stone. It has six faces, pierced on its five sides with large openings. A colored
sandstone mosaic decor helps to liven up the elevations: it takes place under the support of the openings and in the bands which link them. The kiosk is finally topped by a large overhanging roof which protects customers from bad weather. == Personalities ==