Between 1897 and 1899, the industrial sponsor Aimé Gros Schlumberger asked the Parisian landscape architect Edouard André to create a public park that is "a place of leisure but also of education and an introduction to botany"; it combines floral compositions and several exotic species. The park is still adorned with a Renaissance well and a large fountain, a bandstand and a bench exedra, a copy of the one on which Sarah Bernhardt sat in the Théodora play.
Between 1897 and 1899, the industrial sponsor Aimé Gros Schlumberger asked the Parisian landscape architect Edouard André to create a public park that is "a place of leisure but also of education and an introduction to botany"; it combines floral compositions and several exotic species. The park is still adorned with a Renaissance well and a large fountain, a bandstand and a bench exedra, a copy of the one on which Sarah Bernhardt sat in the Théodora play.