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Water tower and pumping station à Toulouse en Haute-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Château d'eau
Haute-Garonne

Water tower and pumping station

    1 Place Laganne
    31000 Toulouse
Château deau de Toulouse
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Château deau et station de pompage
Crédit photo : Didier Descouens - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1789
Bequest of Charles Laganne
1817
Project launch
1821-1825
Construction of the water tower
1829
Network implementation
1870
Decommissioning
1974
Cultural conversion
28 septembre 1987
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château d'eau (cad. 28 AE 255): inscription by order of 28 September 1987

Key figures

Charles Laganne - Capital and patron Legave 50,000 gold francs in 1789.
Jean-François d'Aubuisson de Voisins - Mining Engineer Designs the hydraulic system.
Jean Abadie - Foundry director Winner of the machinery contest.
Jean-Antoine Raynaud - Architect Designed the building in 1823.
Jean Dieuzaide - Photographer Founded the gallery in 1974.
Paul Ourliac - Municipal councillor Proposes conversion in 1971.

Origin and history

The Château d ́eau de Toulouse, built in the 1st quarter of the 19th century, is a brick tower located at the junction of the Cours Dillon and Pont-Neuf. Originally designed to distribute the Garonne water in the city centre, it did not have a storage tank but served as a pumping station. Its architecture, compared to a lighthouse or a "small castle Saint-Ange", divided opinions in its time, between admiration for its strength and criticism of its aesthetics. Disused in 1870, it was transformed into a municipal depot before being converted in 1974 into a photographic exhibition gallery, becoming a major cultural place.

The project was born in 1789 thanks to the legacy of 50,000 gold francs from Capitoul Charles Laganne, designed to provide "pure, clear and pleasant" water to the Touloussains. After political delays, the death of his widow in 1817 revived the project. The engineer Jean-François d'Aubuisson de Voisins, city councillor, studied filtration and water circulation systems for ten years. A competition in 1817 rewarded Jean Abadie for hydraulic machinery, while architect Jean-Antoine Raynaud designed the building. The works, launched in 1821, were completed in 1825, enabling a network of operating fountains to be supplied as early as 1829.

The building, 30 metres high, consists of seven floors: a basement with two 6.5-metre slide wheels operating eight pumps, a circular ground floor, and four floors topped by a lantern. Two water circuits fed the system from the Garonne River, filtered through natural gravels under the Dillon River. Although cited as a remarkable industrial achievement since the 1830s, the castle became obsolete in 1870, a victim of the congestion of its filter gallery. It is then transformed into a tool depot before its cultural restoration.

In 1971, municipal councillor Paul Ourliac proposed to entrust the place to photographer Jean Dieuzaide to become the first municipal photography gallery in France. Since 1974, the ground floor has been open to the public, and the basement, restored in 1984, exhibits remains of the original machinery. Although the floors are not visited, the monument, inscribed in the Historical Monuments in 1987, remains a symbol of Toulouse's industrial heritage, combining technical history and artistic vocation.

The castle is part of an urban context marked by the challenges of sanitation and water supply in the 19th century. Toulouse, in full population growth, suffered from an outdated supply network. The legacy of Laganne and the innovations of Aubuisson, Abadie and Raynaud have made it possible to modernise access to drinking water, while leaving a unique architectural heritage. Today, the site celebrates both pioneer hydraulic engineering and photography, two pillars of local culture.

External links