Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Canal du Midi : Fonserannes Locks à Béziers dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine fluvial
Ecluse
Canal du midi
Hérault

Canal du Midi : Fonserannes Locks

    Rampe du Coche d'Eau
    34500 Béziers
Canal du Midi Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Canal du Midi : Écluses de Fonserannes
Crédit photo : Dedounet (d ·contributions) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1673–1680
Construction of locks
1858
Abandonment of two locks
1988
Putting the water slope into service
14 octobre 1996
Historical monument classification
1996
UNESCO registration
2016–2017
Major site renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

All the locks of Fonsérannes, including the walls of the eight basins, the wharfs of the entire structure on both the Canal du Midi and on the evacuation canal, the fourteen flights of stairs that flank the basins, the stone mooring terminals, the culvert and the vaulted bridge located respectively at the downstream end of the structure and between the fourth and fifth basins (see Box II). non-cadastre, public river estate): classification by decree of 14 October 1996

Key figures

Pierre-Paul Riquet - Engineer Manufacturer of the Canal du Midi.

Origin and history

The Fonserane locks, commonly known as the nine locks, form a lock staircase located at Béziers, in the Hérault, on the Canal du Midi. Built between 1673 and 1680 under the direction of engineer Pierre-Paul Riquet, they allow to cross a elevation of 21.50 meters by 312 meters thanks to eight ovoid basins and nine doors. This book, originally designed to link the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, illustrates a major 17th century technical feat in civil engineering.

Since 1858, the construction of the Orb Canal Bridge has rendered the last two locks obsolete, reducing their active number to six (seven doors). The site preserves historic buildings such as the water billet, stables and lockhouse, demonstrating its central role in river transport. Ranked a historic monument in 1996 and a UNESCO World Heritage Site that year, it attracts 320,000 visitors annually, making it the 3rd most visited site of the former Languedoc-Roussillon region, after the Pont du Gard and Carcassonne.

Between 2016 and 2017, the site underwent a major renovation of 13.2 million euros, financed by the State, the EU, the Occitanie region, the Hérault department and the community of Béziers Méditerranée. The works have modernized the accesses (parking, gardens) and restored heritage elements, such as the house of the d ́eau coche, transformed into a tourist office, setroom and shop. A water slope, built in 1988 to speed up vessel passage, was abandoned due to excessive operating costs.

The protected architectural complex includes basin trimmings, docks, stairways, dammarre terminals, as well as a culvert and a vaulted bridge. The locks remain a passageway for 30,000 annual boats (dwellers, houseboats), while offering visitors a panoramic view of the Béziers Cathedral and the canal. Their innovative design and landscape integration make it a symbol of the French industrial and tourist heritage.

External links