SECANDA paper models for downloading

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France/Bretagne

44 models

St-Ronan chapel, in Plozévet  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 25.6 version 1a


This small chapel is traditionally considered to be the first burial place of Saint Ronan, who was later transferred to Locronan. Leaving aside the field of popular tradition, the fact remains that this chapel was built on a place of worship much older than itself. More information and Download...

St-Conogan chapel, in Beuzec  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 24.09 version 1a


This small chapel in the Cap Sizun region of southwest Brittany is particularly well-proportioned. It has "everything of a great one" and its slender bell tower is very elegant. More information and Download...

Chapel Our Lady of Quillidoaré  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 24.08 version 1a


This large chapel in the Porzay region of western Brittany has a beautiful slender bell tower with a balustrade, the elegance of which is well highlighted by the sobriety of the body of the building. More information and Download...

Chapel Our Lady of Kerinec  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 25.1 version 1a


The beautiful and large rural chapel of Kerinec was once a place of pilgrimage, whose the curious exterior Calvary-pulpit still bears today witness to its fame and significant attendance. More information and Download...

Railway halt/shelter of Plovan  [1:87 (HO)]

ref.: Secanda 25.5 version 1a


A modest halt/shelter on the old metre-gauge railway line of the “Train-carottes” (Douarnenez-Audierne line). More information and Download...

Le Train Youtar  [1:87 (HO)]

ref.: Secanda 25.4 version 1a


The Youtar train (Breton for "porridge eater") ran along the now-closed metre-gauge Douarnenez-Audierne line. Although no longer in use, this little train has left a lasting impression on the people of the Cap Sizun region of Brittany. More information and Download...

Tréogat railway station  [1:87 (HO)]

ref.: Secanda 25.3 version 1a


A modest passenger building of an equally modest railway station on the old "transbigoudène" metre-gauge line of the "Train-carottes" in Brittany. More information and Download...

Common railway stations of the trains Carottes and Youtar  [1:87 (HO)]

ref.: Secanda 25.02 version 2b


The old metre-gauge lines Douarnenez-Audierne (the "Train Youtar") and Pont-l'Abbé - Audierne (the "Train-carottes (Carrot Train)"), in Brittany, had a common section whose two stations had passenger buildings identical except for a few details. Only the one at Pont-Croix still exists today. More information and Download...

Railway stations of the 'Train-carottes'  [HO (1:87)]

ref.: Secanda 24.07 version 1a


Stations on the former Pont-l'Abbé - Audierne local railway line in Brittany, nicknamed the ‘Train-carottes’ (Carrot Train) because it generally carried more vegetables than passengers! The line operated for a short time (1912-1935). More information and Download...

Hénaff water tower, in Pouldreuzic (Brittany/France)  [1:200]

ref.: Secanda 24.06 version 1a


Water tower or pâté box? Both at the same time! The surprising water tower of the Hénaff factory overlooks Pouldreuzic in Brittany, and has become the symbol of this small town in the Pays Bigouden region. More information and Download...

Railway station of Combrit-Tréméoc  [HO (1:87)]

ref.: Secanda 24.05 version 1a


Small rural station on the former Quimper - Pont-l'Abbé local railway line, now disused. More information and Download...

Palace of the Parliament of Brittany  [1:200]

ref.: Secanda 24.02 version 2a


This 17th-century palace is a fine example of classical architecture. At the time of the Kingdom of France, it housed the Parliament of Brittany. This parliament was first and foremost a court of justice, with some local legislative and administrative prerogatives. More information and Download...

Grand Blottereau castle (Nantes)  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 23.13 version 1a


This elegant 18th-century château was built by Gabriel Michel, a slave shipowner from Nantes, on the outskirts of the town. Nantes was France's leading slave port at the time. Today, with its vast park, it is part of the Nantes urban area. More information and Download...

Railway station of Pont-l'Abbé  [HO (1:87)]

ref.: Secanda 23.12 version 1a


Pont-l'Abbé station passenger building (1884) in Brittany, terminus of the former Quimper-Pont-l'Abbé single-track line. The station is now disused and the building has been converted into House of the local associations. More information and Download...

Furniture set of the Osté (Seiz Breur 1925)  [1:10]

ref.: Secanda 23.11 version 1a


Iconic set of furniture from Brittany's Ar Seiz Breur movement, exhibited at the famous 1925 Paris Exposition des Arts Déco. More information and Download...

Gatekeeper's house (PN Pleurtuit)  [H0 (1:87)]

ref.: Secanda 23.10 version 1a


A gatekeeper's house from the the former Dinan-Dinard line (in Pleurtuit, north-eastern Brittany). More information and Download...

Railway stations of Pleslin and Pleurtuit (Dinan-Dinard line)  [H0 (1:87)]

ref.: Secanda 23.08 version 1a


The Dinan-Dinard line was a single-track train line of about twenty kilometers. It was put into service in 1887. The passenger service was stopped in 1986 and the line was definitively closed in 1992. More information and Download...

Roman house of Hent Trégoné in Fouesnant  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 23.07 version 1a


Restitution of a small Roman rural house whose foundations were discovered south of Cornouaille in present-day Brittany. Its dating is estimated at the end of the 1st century or the beginning of the 2nd century More information and Download...

Chapel Our Lady of Penhors, in Pouldreuzic  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.5 version 2b


Our Lady of Penhors is the patron saint of the Bigoudens and this coastal chapel of Western Brittany is each year the location of the Great Pardon des Bigoudens (traditionnal Christian festivity, typical of Brittany). More information and Download...

Mary-Magdalene chapel, in Penmarc'h  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 16.3 version 2b


Like many chapels dedicated to Mary Magdalene, this chapel from the Pays Bigouden, in western Brittany, was once associated with a leprosarium. More information and Download...

S-Tremeur chapel, in Le Guilvinec  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.3 version 2b


Coastal chapel from the Pays Bigouden in western Brittany. Like some other chapels in this area, it is devoid of western portal. More information and Download...

St-Evy chapel, in St-Jean-Trolimon  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.2 version 2b


Small chapel from the Pays Bigouden in western Brittany. Evidence of the ancient cults of the water, it was not built next to a fountain of devotion but on a fountain. More information and Download...

Ste-Agnès church, in Tréfumel  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.6 version 2b


Romanesque church belonging to a very homogeneous local architectural group and specific to the Pays des Faluns (upper valley of Rance river) in Brittany. More information and Download...

St-Vio chapel, in Tréguennec  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.1 version 2b


Small coastal chapel from the Pays Bigouden in western Brittany. It was built near a protohistoric stele that the tradition interprets as the "Boat of St-Vio". More information and Download...

Chapelle de la Tréminou, en Plomeur  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.8 version 2b


This beautiful chapel from the Pays Bigouden in western Brittany is an important place of the revolt of the Bonnets rouges during the 17th century in Britanny. The "Code Paysan" was proclaimed in front of the chapel, a kind of prelude to the French Revolution. More information and Download...

St-Boscat church, in Tréogat  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 23.1 version 1a


A beautiful church of the Pays Bigouden (SW of Brittany in France) from the beginning of the 14th century, partly in the style named "École de Pont-Croix" and largely built in prasinite. More information and Download...

St-Tremeur chapel, in Cleden-Cap-Sizun  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 22.05 version 1a


This pretty little 16th century Breton chapel has an unusual inscription in Breton language (dedication of the chapel and date of foundation) on its south facade, taking up half the length of the facade! More information and Download...

Chapel Our Lady of Kerdevot, in Ergué-Gabéric  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 22.3 version 1a


This large and beautiful rural chapel in the Glazig region of Brittany dates from the 16th century. Popular tradition says that it was built following a plague epidemic. More information and Download...

Tronoën chapel and calvary  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 22.2 version 1a


This famous Breton chapel and its great calvary (the oldest in Brittany) date from the 15th century. The beauty of this chapel and its location in the dunes of the Pays Bigouden led to its being nicknamed the "Cathedral of the sands". More information and Download...

St-Étienne chapel, in Nantes  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 22.1 version 1a


This small, modest-looking chapel is very old, as evidenced by its beautiful, typically Roman masonry. It probably dates from the very end of the imperial period or the beginning of the High Middle Ages. More information and Download...

Tour Solidor (Solidor Tower), in St-Malo  [1:150]

ref.: Secanda 18.3 version 1a


This fortress was built in the 14th century by the duke of Brittany Jean IV, to control he estuary of the Rance river near St-Malo. It shelters now the Musée international du long-cours cap-hornier. More information and Download...

Breton cow  []

ref.: Secanda 18.2 version 1a


This model is more of a paper toy than a real model of a Breton cow of the breed Pie noir, the smallest of the European cattle breeds. More information and Download...

St-Gobrien church, in Morieux  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 17.3 version 1.a


The nave (late 11th - early 12th century) of this church is a rare and well preserved example of the Romanesque architecture in Brittany and is a typical example of it. The Gothic choir is newer. More information and Download...

Chef-du-Bois Mill, in La Forêt-Fouesnant  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 16.15 version 2b


This beautiful double-wheeled mill from Basse-Cornouaille, in western Brittany, is a former communal mill from the Ancien Régime and shows a remarkable aristocratic type of architecture. More information and Download...

Parking disc French-Breton  [1:1]

ref.: Secanda 16.14 version 1a


Parking disc at the legal French size 150 × 150 mm, 100% paper, with French-Breton bilingual text. Indispensable stuff for your next trip in Brittany!
Nb: object in relation to the free document Bombarde How to. More information and Download...

St-Michel church, in Bruc-sur-Aff  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 16.13 version 1a


This rural church in eastern Britain has an ancient nave with an elegant frame bell tower, contrasting with the large transept and choir with cut sides that are much more recent (late nineteenth century). More information and Download...

Boxes for Bombarde reeds  [1:1]

ref.: Secanda 16.10 version 1a


Reinforced box, to accommodate three reeds for the bombarde (traditional Breton oboe) or other near sized reeds.
Nb: object in relation to the free document Bombarde How to. More information and Download...

Temple chapel, in Pléboulle  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 16.8 version 1a


Originally, this Breton chapel was possibly a Templar or Hospitaller chapel although no ancient document will allow to formally attest it. However it was modifyed thereafter. More information and Download...

Tronjoly castle, in Gourin  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 16.6 version 1a


This elegant small Breton castle from the 18th century is well known in Britanny as beeing the site of the annual championship of traditional Breton music players, every early September. More information and Download...

St-Étienne chapel, in Guer  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 16.2 version 1a


Looking like a old barn, this modest chapel, formerly inside a priory, is one of the oldest chapel in Britanny. It has a rare and remarkable chevet which difficult to date but whose style recalls the Carolingian era. More information and Download...

Former St-Pierre cathedral of Alet  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 16.1 version 1a


Restitution of the former cathedral of Alet (now Saint-Servan in Saint-Malo, Brittany) based on the remaining ruins and available archaeological data. This big pre-Romanesque building, today in ruins, was noticeable for its two apses, West and East. More information and Download...

St-Melaine church, in Andouillé-Neuville  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.9 version 1a


The nave of this rural church was originally the former chapel of the castle, then it became later the parish church. The castle today disappeared. More information and Download...

Royal necropolis-abbey of Maxent  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.7 version 1a


Restitution attempt, based on available archaeological data, of the former abbey founded in Maxent by Salomon, the last king of Britanny in the Carolingian period. More information and Download...

Ste-Agathe chapel, in Langon  [1:100]

ref.: Secanda 15.4 version 1a


This tiny chapel is the oldest chapel in Britain. It was established in the former home thermals of a Roman villa now disappeared. More information and Download...