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Five-Canton Bridge in Loriol-du-Comtat dans le Vaucluse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine fluvial
Pont-Aqueduc
Aqueduc

Five-Canton Bridge in Loriol-du-Comtat

    Cinq Cantons 
    84870 Loriol-du-Comtat
Ownership of a public institution
Pont-aqueduc des Cinq-Cantons à Loriol-du-Comtat
Pont-aqueduc des Cinq-Cantons à Loriol-du-Comtat
Pont-aqueduc des Cinq-Cantons à Loriol-du-Comtat
Crédit photo : Véronique PAGNIER - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
vers 1850
Construction of water bridge
2001
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The bridge-aqueduct, in full (Box C 447; D 157): inscription by order of 6 November 2001

Key figures

Conte - Architect engineer Manufacturer of the water bridge.
Perrier - Architect engineer Manufacturer of the water bridge.
Masselin - Architect engineer Manufacturer of the water bridge.
Gendarme - Architect engineer Manufacturer of the water bridge.

Origin and history

The Pont-aqueduct des Cinq-Cantons is an emblematic work located in Loriol-du-Comtat, in the department of Vaucluse, in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region. Built around 1850, it is an integral part of the Carpentras Canal network, designed to transport Durance waters to agricultural lands and surrounding cities. Its functional architecture, typical of the 3rd quarter of the 19th century, met the growing needs of irrigation and economic development of the region, while marking the landscape by its imposing structure over the D950 departmental road.

This historic monument, registered since 2001, reflects the expertise of the engineers of the time, including Conte, Perrier, Masselin and Gendarme. Their work has made it possible to reconcile practical utility and durability, integrating the water pipeline into a wider hydraulic system. The Carpentras Canal, of which it is an essential link, played a key role in the water supply of the Comtat Venaissin plain, thus supporting local agriculture, dominated by the cultivation of fruits, vegetables and vines.

The strategic location of the water bridge north of Carpentras reflects its importance in the flow of resources between the cities of Carpentras and Orange. By crossing a major road like the D950, it also symbolizes the desire to modernize infrastructure under the Second Empire, a period marked by a boom in major public works. Today, there remains a remarkable vestige of this industrial heritage, attracting the attention of historians and enthusiasts of hydraulic architecture.

External links