Initial patent of Ernest Bollée 1868 (≈ 1868)
First technical improvement of wind turbines.
1885
Final patent
Final patent 1885 (≈ 1885)
Double turbine system and automatic orientation.
1893
Installation in Amboise
Installation in Amboise 1893 (≈ 1893)
Commissioning at the Château de la Gabillère.
8 octobre 1991
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 8 octobre 1991 (≈ 1991)
Registration by ministerial decree.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Eolienne Bollée column type, as well as the pump and its shelter (Case AD 93): inscription by order of 8 October 1991
Key figures
Ernest Bollée - Engineer and inventor
Creator of the system patented in 1868.
M. Chambert - Owner of the castle
Sponsor of the wind turbine in 1893.
Auguste Bollée - Suspected workmaster
Associated with technical realization.
Origin and history
The Bollée de la Gabillère wind turbine, installed in 1893 in the Parc du château de la Gabillère in Amboise, was designed to feed the water estate and irrigate its gardens. Sponsored by Mr Chambert, owner of the castle, it illustrates the technical innovation of the period, with a double turbine and an automatic orientation system patented by Ernest Bollée in 1885. Its architecture combines a hollow column with a helical staircase and a funnel optimizing wind capture.
Ranked a historic monument in 1991, this type 1 wind turbine (2.5 m diameter) is one of the few to retain all its original features, with the exception of an orientation propeller. It symbolizes the adaptation of renewable energies to the domestic and agricultural needs of the late 19th century. Its masonry shelter, sheltering the pump and well, demonstrates its functional role in the hydraulic management of the park.
The wind turbine is part of the tourist industrial heritage, marked by the inventions of the Bollée, a family of local engineers. Its location, on a plateau to the south of Amboise near the forest, reflects a landscape integration typical of the utility installations of the period. Today, it remains a preserved example of Bollée wind turbines, some 50 of which remain in France.
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