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Timeline
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1890
Factory Foundation
Factory Foundation 1890 (≈ 1890)
Construction by the Stumm brothers, first blast furnace.
1919
French-controlled crossing
French-controlled crossing 1919 (≈ 1919)
Integration with the Forges and Steelworks of the North and Lorraine.
1965
National specialization
National specialization 1965 (≈ 1965)
Concentration of French cast casting production.
1991
Final closure
Final closure 1991 (≈ 1991)
Stop production despite technical innovations.
2001
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 2001 (≈ 2001)
Protection of the U4 blast furnace and its annexes.
2016
Opening of MetaFensch
Opening of MetaFensch 2016 (≈ 2016)
Metallurgy research platform.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The U4 blast furnace with its appendices: cowpers including the chimney, casting hall, piping, loading portico, sewage systems, Staehler bins, bin rack wagons, rolling rails, material accumulators; facades and roofs of the compressor building; the entire blower building, including machinery; facades, roofs, entrance hall and large staircase of the administration building; the total electrical substation, with the installations; boiler building, including machinery (Box B 4589/356, 4590/356, 4591/356, 4592/356, 4593/356, 4594/356, 4595/356): inscription by order of 11 January 2001
Key figures
Frères Stumm - Industrial founders
Initial owners, Sarrois forge masters.
Association MECILOR - Actor of preservation
Covered by former employees, classified in 2001.
Claude Lévêque - Plastic artist
Author of the light *All suns*.
Origin and history
The steel factory of Uckange, founded in 1890 by the German company Gebrüder Stumm, is part of the industrial expansion of the Moselle annexed after 1871. Placed in the Fensch valley, it first exploits the lorraine minette, a local iron-poor ore, to produce cast iron gullies. Between 1890 and 1913, six blast furnaces were built, employing nearly 600 people at their peak in 1913. The factory is constantly modernizing, passing under French control in 1919 after the First World War, before being integrated into the Forges and Acierie du Nord et de Lorraine (FANL).
In the mid-war, the factory went through crises (temporary closures in the 1920s and 1930s), but specialized in moulding. Starting in the 1960s, it abandoned minette to imported minerals (Brazil, Mauritania), becoming the only French factory of special fonts after the concentration of the sector. Technical innovations mark this period: fuel oil injection and ground coal, automation, and even plasma torches testing in the 1980s. Despite these advances, the decline in the market led to its definitive closure in 1991, after decades of restructuring.
The U4 blast furnace, rebuilt in 1976 and automated in 1988, is preserved thanks to the mobilisation of the MECILOR association (created in 1991 by former employees). Ranked a historic monument in 2001, it is integrated into the Jardin des Traces, a landscaped area combining industrial memory and cultural conversion. The site, now owned by the urban community of Val de Fensch, hosts projects such as the MetaFensch research platform (2016) and film shoots. Its future is inspired by cross-border models, such as the Völklingen blast furnaces (Germany) or the Esch-Belval blast furnace (Luxembourg), classified at UNESCO.
The Uckange factory illustrates the changes in the Lorraine steel industry: from the German era (1871-1918) to the deindustrialisation of the 1980s-1990s. Its technical heritage (cowpers, casting hall, sewage systems) and social (worker's memoir worn by MECILOR) make it a symbol of the industrial heritage of the Great East. Current challenges include securing the site for indoor visits and integrating it into a tourist and scientific dynamic, between preservation and innovation.
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Future
After a conservation campaign, supported by the MECILOR association, the U4 blast furnace is classified, integrated into a landscaped area, the Jardin des Traces.
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