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Former Weaving Louis Lepaoutre à Tourcoing dans le Nord

Nord

Former Weaving Louis Lepaoutre

    158 Chaussée Pierre Curie
    59200 Tourcoing
Ancien tissage Louis Lepoutre
Ancien tissage Louis Lepoutre
Crédit photo : VVVCFFrance - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1825–1903
Augustus Lepaoutre's life
1921–1923
Construction of weaving
1923
Establishment of the well
1971
Transfer of dyeing
années 1980
Factory closure
21 avril 2000
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of the building of the former weaving, the concierge and the closing wall of the industrial site (box AT 600): inscription by order of 21 April 2000

Key figures

Auguste Lepoutre - Founding industrial Created the first family factory.
Marcel Forest - Weaving architect Designed the factory in 1921–1923.

Origin and history

The former Louis Lepaoutre weaving, built between 1921 and 1923 in Tourcoing, is a key element of a large textile factory covering more than four hectares. Designed by architect Marcel Forest, a specialist in industrial buildings, this mill incorporates combing, weaving and dyeing, with the exception of washing raw wool. Its red brick facades, enhanced by geometric patterns in white varnished brick, and its four-storey tank tower make it a remarkable example of the industrial architecture of the era. The site, surrounded by a fence wall, also includes worker housing (1923) and a concierge along Industrial Boulevard.

The Louis Lepoutre mill is part of the industrial heritage launched in the mid-19th century by Auguste Lepoutre (1825–1903), founder of the first family factory. In 1971, the site hosts dyeing activities transferred from Roubaix, before finally stopping in the 1980s. Today protected under the Historic Monuments (decree of 21 April 2000), the building houses commercial activities, such as La Blanche Porte. An 188-metre well, dug in 1923, shows increasing water requirements, from 30,000 m3 to 180,000 m3 in 1971.

The weaving workshop, 150 metres long on Colbert Street, is distinguished by its wide metal sill bays and its northwest corner tower, combining staircase and reservoir. The chimney bears the date of construction of the factory, while the facades, decorated with white bricks in geometric motifs, reflect the functional aesthetic and adorned with the manufactures of the North. Ranked among the major industrial sites of the Hauts-de-France, this monument illustrates the textile age of the region, marked by a vertical integration of production processes.

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