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Garches

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Garches ( French pronunciation: [ɡaʁʃ] ) is a commune in the western suburbs of Paris , France . It is located 11.9 km (7.4 mi) from the centre of Paris .

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6-459: Garches has remained largely residential, with a population of 17,898 as of 2021, but is also the location of Raymond Poincaré University Hospital , which specialises in traumatology , road accidents and physiotherapy . The northern part of Garches was largely destroyed in the Battle of Buzenval on 19 January 1871, when besieged Parisian forces under Louis Jules Trochu attempted to break through

12-672: The German blockade and join the French troops at Versailles . Monuments in Rue du 19 janvier and Rue du Colonel de Rochebrune commemorate the events. Construction of the church began in 1298 following the canonisation of St. Louis , as recorded on the plaque at the entrance. It was the first church in France dedicated to St. Louis. The original church was partly destroyed in the Battle of Buzenval; it

18-531: The area include: There is a private school in the commune, Ecole Jean-Paul II. Raymond Poincar%C3%A9 University Hospital The Raymond Poincaré University Hospital is a public hospital of the Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) and a teaching hospital of Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines University . Located at Garches ( Hauts-de-Seine , formerly in Seine-et-Oise ), it

24-543: The church was moved in 1930 and contains the graves of some well-known people, including jazz musician Sidney Bechet , who chose to spend his last years in Garches. Garches is served by Garches–Marnes-la-Coquette station on the Transilien Paris-Saint-Lazare suburban rail line and by 9 bus lines linking it with Paris and other suburbs. Public schools: Specialized senior high schools in

30-509: Was built between 1932 and 1936 and named after Raymond Poincaré , French president from 1913 to 1920. In the 1950s the hospital specialised in the rehabilitation of polio patients (the disease was then widespread, including in France) and in its professor André Grossiord and the orthopedic doctor Olivier Troisier set up the Centre national de traitement des séquelles de la polio . This includes

36-449: Was rebuilt in 1876 and restored beginning in 1980 with the 19th-century stained-glass windows and continuing in 1983 with the complete restoration and enlargement of the organ. The spire was rebuilt in 1988, the cross reconsecrated in 1989, the carved tympanum restored in 1990, and interior and façade renovation carried out beginning in 1995. A bell dated to 1787 was classified as a historic monument on 27 April 1944. The cemetery adjacent to

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