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Former Givors Canal à Tartaras dans la Loire

Loire

Former Givors Canal

    1 Chemin de l'Ecluse
    42800 Tartaras
Ancien canal de Givors
Ancien canal de Givors
Ancien canal de Givors
Ancien canal de Givors
Ancien canal de Givors
Ancien canal de Givors
Ancien canal de Givors
Crédit photo : Georgespitiot - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1763-1780
Construction of canal
6 décembre 1780
Official Inauguration
Années 1830
Decline facing the rail
1886
Repurchase by the State
Années 1960
Channel filling
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

See commune of : Givors (Rhône)

Key figures

François Zacharie - Initiator and financial Merchants Lyonnais, project launcher in 1763.
Guillaume Zacharie - Inheritance and continuity Son of Francis, resumed work after 1768.
Guillaume Marie Delorme - Hydraulic Architect The construction was completed in 1771.
Jacques-Germain Soufflot - Influential architect Technical and political support of the project.
Gabriel de Sartine - Police Lieutenant-General Institutional support through his stepfather.

Origin and history

The Givors Canal, also known as the canal of the two seas, was designed to connect the Loire to the Rhône via a 15.5 km route between Givors and Rive-de-Gier, extended later to La Grand-Croix. Initiated by François Zacharie, a Lyon merchant, the project aimed to facilitate the transport of goods, including coal and manufactured goods from Saint-Étienne. The canal consisted of 29 locks, 5 water bridges, and a 171-metre river tunnel, the "Drilled Rock". Its gauge allowed the passage of 22.5 m long vessels, with annual traffic reaching 3,000 boats and 140,000 tons of cargo at its peak.

The construction, begun in 1763, was marked by financial difficulties after the death of Zacharias in 1768, leaving his son Guillaume with a legacy of debts. The architect Guillaume Marie Delorme was hired to complete the works, and a private company, the "Company of Interests of the Givors Canal", was created in 1774 to finance the project. Despite an initial success — with dividends exceeding 11 million francs — the canal declined in the face of competition from rail in the 1830s. It was bought by the state in 1886 and was finally filled in the 1960s to give way to the A47 motorway, leaving only a few remains.

Among the key figures, François Zacharie was supported by influential figures such as architect Jacques-Germain Soufflot or Lieutenant General Gabriel de Sartine. The canal played a major economic role, serving notably the glassworks of Michel Robichon and the coal mines of La Grand-Croix. Its headquarters, built between 1792 and 1796, became the city hall of Rive-de-Gier. Today, only scattered traces of its historical importance in the Gier Valley remain.

External links