Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Radio transmitter à Dardilly dans le Rhône

Rhône

Radio transmitter

    33 Chemin de la Brochetière
    69570 Dardilly
Crédit photo : Dominique Robert - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1927
Fondation de la Société Française Radioélectrique
1929
Purchase by Pierre Laval
1935
Construction of the transmitter
1940-1944
Period *Radio Laval*
1944
Requisition for Liberation
16 janvier 1990
Partial protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs of the main building; basin; entry portal (Box BX 21): registration by order of 16 January 1990

Key figures

Gabriel Deveraux - Architect Manufacturer of the temple-shaped building.
Pierre Laval - Owner (from 1929) Politician associated with the station.

Origin and history

Dardilly's radio transmitter was established in 1935 for the Société Française Radioélectrique, a private Lyon company founded in 1927. Designed by architect Gabriel Deveraux, the building adopts an antique temple aesthetic to mitigate its industrial appearance. It housed on the ground floor electric converters and, upstairs, offices, a studio and a control desk. A decorative basin, integrated with a cooling circuit of emission lamps, completed the architectural ensemble.

During World War II, the station was renamed Radio Laval after Pierre Laval, a controversial political figure, became its owner in 1929. Upon Liberation, the transmitter was requisitioned and then abandoned. The 135-metre mast, which is now extinct, and the building, which is heavily degraded, only retain their facades, roofs, basins and gates, protected since a 1990 decree. The exact location at 43 Chemin de Traîne-Cul remains poorly documented despite approximate GPS coordinates.

The transmitter illustrates the golden age of private radio in France, marked by technical innovations and political stakes. Its decommissioning reflects the technological and ideological upheavals of the twentieth century, while its hybrid architecture reflects a desire to reconcile industrial functionality with landscape integration. The protected elements (façades, basin, portal) highlight its heritage value, although its current condition limits its accessibility.

External links