On 15 December 1867 the Reformed Temple was opened on the Boulevard Lundy in a converted building that had formerly been a riding school.
[1] The temple was dedicated on 24 June 1923 by Pastor Louis Gonin, president of the Presbyteral council of Reims.
[1] The interior walls were originally covered with Art Deco frescoes by Gustave Louis Jaulmes, representing subjects such as the Tree of Life, Tables of the Law and Huguenot Cross with tears, with many plant decorations.
This gives the temple a sober or austere interior, more in line with the Reformed Church tradition.
The building was designed by Charles Letrosne (1868–1938) in a flamboyant neo-Gothic style influenced by Eugène Viollet-le-Duc.