Crédit photo : Daniel VILLAFRUELA. - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1859
Foundation of the company Fléchet
Foundation of the company Fléchet 1859 (≈ 1859)
Creation of the iconic chapelière company.
1902
Construction of plant
Construction of plant 1902 (≈ 1902)
Edited by Eugène Baure, Lyon architect.
1927
Expansion of workshops
Expansion of workshops 1927 (≈ 1927)
Extension with bridge above the street.
1931
Office modernization
Office modernization 1931 (≈ 1931)
Work conducted by Auguste Bossu.
1976
Production discontinued
Production discontinued 1976 (≈ 1976)
End of making hats.
1999
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 1999 (≈ 1999)
Protection of original buildings and equipment.
2013
Opening of La Chapellerie
Opening of La Chapellerie 2013 (≈ 2013)
Transformation into a workshop-museum of the hat.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The buildings built in 1902: workshops, boiler room and fireplace, guard house, yard floor, gate and fence; the office building built in 1931 (Box AC 257): registration by order of 17 December 1999
Key figures
Eugène Baure - Lyon architect
Manufacturer of the factory in 1902.
Auguste Bossu - Stephanese architect
Modernized the offices in 1931.
Origin and history
The former Fléchet factory, located in Chazelles-sur-Lyon, embodies the golden age of French chapelry in the early 20th century. Built in 1902 by the Lyon architect Eugène Baure (1868-1911), it was enlarged in 1927 and modernized in 1931 by Auguste Bossu (1885-1946), linking its workshops by a bridge above the street. This industrial complex, the most monumental in the city, maintained a central boiler room and a fireplace distributing steam and hot water to the surrounding workshops. The production of felt hats in rabbit hair, a local specialty, ceased in 1976, leaving room for storage uses.
Ranked a historic monument in 1999 for its 1902 buildings (workshops, boiler room, guardian's house) and its 1931 offices, the factory became in 2013 the site of La Chapellerie, a museum workshop. It reconstructs a factory of the 1920s with time machines and exhibits 400 hats tracing their history, from the Middle Ages to haute couture. This cultural project values an industrial heritage linked to the economic identity of Chazelles, once French capital of the felt hat.
The Fléchet company, founded in 1859, symbolizes the local prosperity associated with this industry. Its architecture reflects the industrial standards of the time: workshops in length on several levels, surrounded by hangars. The remarkable conservation of the site, including yard floor, gate and fence, makes it possible today to understand the manufacturing processes and the organization of work. The museum, created in 1983 under the name Musée du Chapeau, perpetuates this artisanal know-how and its social impact in the region.
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