The Hôtel de Ville (French pronunciation: [otɛl də vil], City Hall) is a municipal building in Doullens, Somme, northern France, standing on Avenue du Maréchal Foch.
It was designed by Anatole Bienaimé in the neoclassical style, built in red brick with stone dressings by a local contractor, Wulfran Thuillier, and was officially opened in June 1898.
On the first floor, there was a tall casement window flanked by two pairs of Corinthian order columns supporting a frieze, a cornice and a pediment containing a clock.
The British representatives were Milner, Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, and Generals Henry Wilson, Herbert Lawrence, and Archibald Montgomery.
[8][9] The room where the Doullens Conference was held was later transformed into a permanent memorial to the event: the additions included a pair of busts depicting Clemenceau and Milner created by the sculptor, François-Léon Sicard, in 1918, a stained glass window, designed by Gérard Ansart and made by Jean Gaudin, in 1937, and two murals painted by Lucien Jonas in 1938.