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Royal Chamousset Bridge en Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Pont

Royal Chamousset Bridge

    D1006
    73390 Chamousset
State property; property of an association
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Pont Royal de Chamousset
Crédit photo : Florian Pépellin - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1830-1841
Ending the Arc
1844
Start of work
27 décembre 1848
Speech by Léon Brunier
1850
Resumption of work
11 février 1854
Watering
25 septembre 1986
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Gelon hydraulic tunnel and Royal Bridge (Box ZR 35; B 205): inscription by order of 25 September 1986

Key figures

Joseph Mosca - Chief Engineer Directed the tunnel works.
Léon Brunier - Deputy of Aiguebelle Denounced flooding in 1848.

Origin and history

The Royal Bridge of Chamousset, located in the Savoy department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, is associated with the Gelon hydraulic tunnel, a major 19th-century structure. Watered in 1854, this 125-metre-long tunnel was dug to solve the flooding problems caused by the Gelon, a tributary of the Arc, after its containment between 1830 and 1841. The work, led by engineer Joseph Mosca, lasted a decade due to technical difficulties, including the instability of the moraine, requiring a two-chamber design instead of a single one.

Before the tunnel was built, the Gelon floods, blocked by the dykes of the Arc, regularly transformed the Chamousset and Bourgneuf lands into marshes, destroying crops and causing epidemics of fever. In 1848 Léon Brunier denounced the catastrophic situation, where the fields had become uncultivated and the population decimated. This dramatic context accelerated the project of deviation from the Gelon to the Isère via the tunnel, despite delays and changes of entrepreneurs.

The tunnel, listed as a historical monument in 1986 with the Royal Bridge, illustrates 19th century hydraulic engineering. Built in stone masonry and concrete, it allows the Gelon to cross the hill of Chamousset before reaching Isère. Nearby, the Saint-Maurice church, also classified, overlooks this hydraulic system, witness to the human adaptations to the geographical and climatic challenges of the Savoy.

The materials used, such as the stones of Reverdel's quarry or the concrete vaults, reflect the techniques of the era. The project, albeit late, settled the floods and improved local living conditions. Today, the Royal Bridge and the tunnel remain symbols of Savoyard industrial and architectural heritage, protected for their historical and technical value.

External links