Replacement of pipelines 1788 (≈ 1788)
From wood to cast iron.
fin du XVIIIe siècle
Construction of the pipe
Construction of the pipe fin du XVIIIe siècle (≈ 1895)
Liaison between Salins-les-Bains and Arc-et-Senans.
1982 et 2009
UNESCO rankings
UNESCO rankings 1982 et 2009 (≈ 2009)
World Heritage Salines.
29 décembre 2009
Registration for historical monuments
Registration for historical monuments 29 décembre 2009 (≈ 2009)
Protection of masonry remains.
2013
Creation of the Gabelous Trail
Creation of the Gabelous Trail 2013 (≈ 2013)
Tourist route on the old route.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
See commune of Salins-les-Bains (39)
Key figures
Denis François Dez - Geometer
Manufacturer of the Saumoduct and route.
Claude-Nicolas Ledoux - Architect
Author of Arc-et-Senans saline.
Gabelous - Salt Customs
Monitored the Saumoduct against theft.
Origin and history
The Salins-les-Bains Saumoduct at Arc-et-Senans was built at the end of the 18th century to link the Salins-les-Bains saline (Jura) and the Arc-et-Senans saline (Doubs). He was 21 km long, carrying the brine extracted from Salins to the new royal saline d'Arc, without salt sources. This project, led by the surveyor Denis François Dez, was designed to save wood by concentrating brine through a 500-metre graduation building, prior to storage in a 900-m3 tank.
The pipes, initially in hollowed fir trunks, were replaced by cast iron in 1788 to limit losses. Locked in to avoid freezing and theft by the false-salters, the Saumoduct was monitored by six "control houses" where the gabelous (salt customs) measured flow and salinity. The brine, lowered from 104 to 109 metres above sea level, was transported at a daily rate of 135,000 litres.
The masonry remains of the Saumoduc, listed as historical monuments in 2009, include bowls (Monplaisir, Perrichon) and a passage under the road from Lyon to Rennes-sur-Loue. The cast iron pipes were dismantled during World War I for the war effort, and the graduation building was deconstructed. Today, the Gabelous Trail, built in 2013, traces its route with informative signs.
The two salines, classified at UNESCO (1982 and 2009), illustrate the ingenuity of pre-industrial techniques. The saumoduct symbolizes the adaptation to geographical and economic constraints, while at the same time testifying to the conflicts related to the gabelle, tax on salt. Its route, following the Furiause and Loue rivers, crosses communes such as Port-Lesney and Rennes-sur-Loue, where protected remains remain.
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