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Canal bridge of La Tranchasse à Ainay-le-Vieil dans le Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine fluvial
Pont-canal
Route Jacques-Coeur
Cher

Canal bridge of La Tranchasse

    La Tranchasse
    18200 Ainay-le-Vieil

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1822
Initial project
1829-1834
Construction
1837
First restoration
1844
Oil coating
1872
Enlargement
décembre 1878
Partial collapse
1955
End of operation
2009
MH classification
2014-2019
Closure and reopening
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Joseph-Michel Dutens - Design engineer Directed the construction of the canal bridge.
Charles Vauvilliers - Project Engineer Proposed the initial plan in 1822.

Origin and history

The canal bridge of La Tranchasse, located between Ainay-le-Vieil and Colombiers in the Cher, was built between 1829 and 1834 to allow the Berry Canal to cross the Cher. Designed by engineer Joseph-Michel Dutens, it is 96 metres long with 8 low arches, and was the longest canal bridge in this river system. By 1837, the local stone, vulnerable to weather, required urgent repairs.

In 1844, the bowl was covered with bitumen and expanded to 2.70 m, then to 5.30 m in 1872 to respond to the increase in traffic. A partial collapse in 1878 led to reinforcements by metal pulls and steel rings on the batteries. Used until 1955, it was used mainly to transport coal and ore between the Allier mines and the Berry forges.

Disused in 1956, the bridge was closed to pedestrians in 2014 due to the deterioration of the guardrails, before being reopened after work in 2019. Close by, the smaller (10 m) La Croix Canal Bridge crossed the Roche Creek. Since 2009, the whole (channel bridge, lock and adjacent bridge) has been listed as historical monuments, testifying to 19th century river engineering.

The secured lock, filled in the 1960s-70s, and the lockhouse, converted into a home, recall the past activity of the site. The northern basin, now abandoned as the bridge, completes this heritage complex linked to the golden age of the canals in France.

External links