Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Bridge on the Hérault de Gignac dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Pont
Hérault

Bridge on the Hérault de Gignac

    D32E3D
    34150 Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Pont sur lHérault de Gignac
Crédit photo : Fagairolles 34 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1756
First project by François Garipuy
30 décembre 1774
Final draft approval
1776
Start of work
1782
Death of the Garipuy
1790-1803
Interruption of work
1810
Completion of the bridge
29 décembre 1950
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Bridge on the Hérault : inscription by order of 29 December 1950

Key figures

François Garipuy - Engineer and original contractor Author of the first project in 1756.
Bertrand Garipuy - Director of Public Works of Languedoc Son of Francis, led the project from 1774.
Jean Antoine Marie Thérèse Ducros - Neveu des Garipuy, successor in 1782 Take over the construction site after their death.
Antoine Billoin - Inspector then Chief Engineer Seconded Ducros, then led the works in 1791.
Jean Emmanuel Fontenay - Final Chief Engineer Finish the bridge in 1810.

Origin and history

The bridge of Gignac, located on the road linking Montpellier to Lodève, was planned in 1774 by Bertrand Garipuy, director of public works of Languedoc, succeeding his father François Garipuy. The work, begun in 1776, was marked by major technical challenges, including complex foundations in the bed of the Hérault, where the rock plunged up to 10 metres deep. A small model of the bridge, built at a scale of 1/6 on Larnoux Creek between 1776 and 1777, allowed the architectural choices to be validated before the final construction.

The death of the Garipuy in 1782, victims of an epidemic of suette, temporarily interrupted the construction site, then taken over by their nephew Jean Antoine Marie Thérèse Ducros. The work, financed by the General States of Languedoc, was slowed down by the French Revolution and the depreciation of the assignates. Despite a final cost of over £1 million, the bridge was completed in 1810 under the direction of engineer Jean Emmanuel Fontenay, after interruptions between 1790 and 1803.

The bridge, characterized by a large low central arch of 48.42 metres flanked by two lateral arches of 25.97 metres, was designed to withstand the frequent floods of the Hérault. Its foundations, built inside of coffers with screws for exhaustion, and its masonry hangers, inspired by the collapse of a wooden hanger during a previous project, testify to the technical innovation of the time. In 1895, modifications were made to allow the passage of the departmental railway, and the bridge was inscribed in the historic monuments on December 29, 1950.

Before its construction, a former medieval bridge, destroyed by a flood three hundred years before 1675, occupied the same site. François Garipuy's initial project in 1756, estimated at 180,000 pounds, was abandoned due to revised costs of 510,000 pounds after surveys revealing more complex foundations. The final choice of an expanded central arch reduced the costs of foundations, although the project eventually exceeded all initial estimates.

The cut stones come from a quarry near the Pouget, and the masonries of the foundations were made in rubble of Saint-Beauzile bound by a puzzolan mortar. The bridge, 174.76 metres long and 20.64 metres high, remains a remarkable example of 18th-century bridge architecture, combining functionality and aesthetics. Its history reflects the technical, financial and political challenges of its time, as well as the perseverance of the engineers who designed it.

External links