This house is mentioned in 1745, but it is certainly older. In 1760, it belongs to Jean Pigné Mason and his wife Catherine Duru. The couple owned several houses and Jouy-en-Josas Loges-en-Josas, including the building of the ECU located rue Oberkampf.
January 31, 1760, Jean Pigné rents this house "lease in favor of Mr Abraham Guerne Tavannes and others." Tavannes being the first partner Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf. The house was rented for 9 years at 300 F per year. It is likely Oberkampf did not renew the lease.
It originally consisted of three lower rooms, high bedroom, three barns cow and a courtyard. This first workshop is a makeshift settlement: Oberkampf is forced to place his boiler outside the house and his younger brother Frederick, who works with him, must stay in Versailles.
May 1, 1760, Oberkampf prints its first Jouy, in the house of Stone Bridge. The following year, he produces 3500 pieces. It was then rent a second house to house shops and offices, as well as land to build a shed housing the boilers, tanks and washing machines. These annexes formed with the house of the Stone Bridge, "the temporary establishment."
In 1813, the house belonged to Feugères, the mason Oberkampf.
In 1835 it was bought by Madame Jules Mallet (selling jewelery) to found a private asylum, ancestor of our nursery schools for the children of "working mothers" on the model of the one she had conceived Paris.
The infant school is mixed and welcomes children from 3 to 6 years. Operating costs and wages are the responsibility of the Mallet family.
From 1882 to 1895 it is listed on the cadastral matrices on behalf of the Charity Office.
From 1895 to 1903, it belongs to the Mallet family and in 1903 was sold to the town.
The music conservatory is installed there for ten years.