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Royal Corderie de Rochefort en Charente-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine maritime
Corderie maritime
Charente-Maritime

Royal Corderie de Rochefort

    Rue Jean-Baptiste Audebert
    17300 Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Corderie royale de Rochefort
Crédit photo : Berrucomons - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1666
Construction begins
1669
Completion of building
1862
End of production
1944
Fire during the war
1967
Historical monument classification
1986
Opening of the International Sea Centre
2017
Exhibition renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Corderie de l'Arsenal (old), including its auxiliary buildings: water castle, fountain, guard corps (C 69 to 71): classification by order of 10 October 1967

Key figures

Jean-Baptiste Colbert - Minister of Louis XIV Initiator of the arsenal and the Corderie.
François Blondel - Architect Manufacturer of the building in 1666.
Jean Colbert du Terron - Head of Rochefort Cousin de Colbert, influence the selection of the site.
Michel Bégon - Navy warden Associated with the botanical garden and begonia.
Maurice Dupont - Rear-Admiral Directed rehabilitation in the 1960s.
Michel Mastorakis - Chief Architect Head of restoration work (1973-1988).

Origin and history

The Royal Corderie de Rochefort, built in 1666 under the leadership of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, is an emblematic building of Rochefort's maritime arsenal. With its 374 meters long, it was until the 20th century the longest industrial building in Europe, designed to make the ropes necessary for the French Royal Navy. Its bold architecture, based on an oak-wood radier to stabilize the marshy soil, reflects Louis XIV's ambition to compete with the English and Dutch marines.

The building, designed by architect François Blondel, was completed in 1669 after three years of construction. It housed mills for spinning, cutting and tarring, producing up to 100 km of ropes for warships. The Corderie played a key role in the development of Rochefort, from 500 inhabitants to a prosperous city thanks to the arsenal. It ceased operations in 1862 with the advent of steam propulsion and was partially destroyed by fire in 1944.

Ranked a historic monument in 1967, the Corderie was restored between 1973 and 1988 under the direction of architect Michel Mastorakis. Today, it houses the International Sea Centre, a media library, and exhibitions dedicated to maritime history. Its Return Garden, designed by Bernard Lassus, and its interactive exhibitions make it a major cultural site in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, attracting more than 100,000 visitors annually.

The site is part of a larger heritage complex, including the National Marine Museum, the L-Hermione replica, and the historic botanical garden of the arsenal. The Corderie symbolizes both the technical ingenuity of the seventeenth century and the successful conversion of an industrial heritage into a cultural and tourist space.

Among the notable innovations, the Corderie was home to 19th-century cable machines and was the place to make ropes for famous ships such as La Méduse or L-Hermione. Its permanent exhibition, renovated in 2017, offers demonstrations of mating and teaching tools to explain the techniques of making ropes, while highlighting its history through videos and holograms.

External links