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Pradelles-Cabardes cooler à Pradelles-Cabardès dans l'Aude

Patrimoine classé
Glacière
Aude

Pradelles-Cabardes cooler

    15 Route du Pic de Nore
    11380 Pradelles-Cabardès
Glacière de Pradelles-Cabardès
Glacière de Pradelles-Cabardès
Glacière de Pradelles-Cabardès
Glacière de Pradelles-Cabardès
Glacière de Pradelles-Cabardès
Glacière de Pradelles-Cabardès
Glacière de Pradelles-Cabardès
Crédit photo : METGE Jean - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1659
Royal Authorization
1709
Declination of monopoly
1849
First commercial cooler
1859
Expansion of activity
1927
End of activity
1986
Heritage protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Former cooler: registration by order of 19 June 1986

Key figures

Pierre Piquemol - Icemaker Constructor of the first cooler in 1849.
Fils de Pierre Piquemol - Developer of the activity Built five additional coolers in 1859.
Jean Pech - Last operator Closure of its cooler in 1925.
Jules Assémat - Last active glacier Production definitely ceased in 1927.

Origin and history

The Pradelles-Cabardès coolers, located in the department of Aude in the Occitanie region, are semi-entered pits built in the 19th century. They were built to exploit local climatic conditions, 830 metres above sea level at the foot of the Nore Woodpecker, to produce and market natural ice. This trade, initiated around 1849 by Pierre Piquemol, developed rapidly with the construction of five other coolers by his son in 1859, becoming a major economic activity for the village.

Ice was produced by staining winter snow in cylindrical pits 8 to 10 metres in diameter, covered with beech leaves for insulation. The ice loaves, weighing 50 kg, were then transported by carts to the surrounding plains, serving cities such as Carcassonne, Narbonne, Mazamet, and even Toulouse or Bordeaux thanks to the railway. This trade declined in the early 20th century with the advent of artificial ice and the First World War, which requisitioned men and horses, ending this industry in 1927.

The Pradelles-Cabardes coolers, numbering about a dozen, were ingenious structures: a six-metre deep masonry well, topped by a slate roof supported by stone arches and a wooden frame. They included doors for filling and draining, as well as a drainage system for cast iron water. These buildings, which were listed as historic monuments in 1986, reflect a time when natural ice was a valuable and lucrative resource.

The first documents relating to the marketing of ice in the region date back to 1659, when the king authorized by letters patent the construction of coolers in Languedoc. This royal monopoly, initially run by farmers-general, declined in the face of competition from the village ice-makers authorized from 1709. The activity started again around 1850 in the form of independent enterprises, before disappearing permanently with the industrialisation of ice production.

Today, a hiking tour allows you to discover several of these coolers, located near the village and Lake Pradelles-Cabardès. These vestiges illustrate an unknown page of rural industrial heritage, where human ingenuity was able to use natural resources to meet growing ice demand, before technical progress made this activity obsolete.

External links