Achille Duchêne
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Achille Duchêne (1866-1947) was a French garden designer who worked in the grand manner established by André Le Nôtre. The son of the landscaper Henri Duchêne, Achille Duchêne was the garden designer most in demand among high French society at the turn of the twentieth century. He built up a large office to handle the practice, which was responsible over a period of years for some six thousand gardens in France and worldwide.
Among the more notable commissions:
- Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte for Alfred Sommier
- Château de Champs, Champs-sur-Marne, for comte Louis Cahen d'Anvers
- Château de Courances, for the marquise Jean de Ganay
- Château du Marais, for comte Boni de Castellane (1903-1906)
- Château de Breteuil (Yvelines) (with his father Henri Duchêne)
- Château de Rosny-sur-Seine (Yvelines), for Paul Lebaudy (end of the nineteenth century})
- Château de Voisins at Saint-Hilarion (Yvelines), for comte Edmond de Fels
- Water parterres of Blenheim Palace for the duke of Marlborough
- Château de Langeais
- Château de Sassy (Orne), about 1925, for Gaston d'Audiffret
- Garden of the Hôtel Porgès, 18 avenue Montaigne, Paris 8e, for Jules Porgès
- Gardens of the Palais Rose, avenue Foch, for Boni de Castellane
- Nordkirchen Schlossgarten, Nordkirchen, Germany
- Château de la Verrerie (Le Creusot), for the Schneider family (1904-1908)
- Garden at the Cloître de l'Abbaye de Royaumont (1912)
- Park of Schoppenwihr at Ostheim (Haut-Rhin), garden restoration for général baron de Berckheim
In 1935, Achille Duchêne published Les jardins de l'avenir, in which he affirmed that there was no future for grand aristocratic parks, and that for the future one must think in terms of simplified maintenance in reduced scale.