Locks on the Canal du Midi

There are 91 working locks on the Canal du Midi along its 240-kilometre (150 mi) course from the Bassin du Thau on the Mediterranean coast to the junction with the Canal lateral a la Garonne in Toulouse. There are a further 13 locks on the 37-kilometre (23 mi) La Nouvelle branch which runs through Narbonne to the Mediterranean at Port-la-Nouvelle.[1] The locks are all under the management of the French navigation authority, Voies navigables de France.

Contents

Construction

The Canal du Midi was built between 1666 and 1681 by Pierre-Paul Riquet to provide an inland water route through Southern France between the Atlantic at Bordeaux and the Mediterranean at Sète via the Garonne. The first design for the locks on the canal was a rectangular shape however due to a collapse of a side-wall early in the building program (exactly which lock is not recorded), Riquet modified his plans and rebuilt both existing and new locks with an ovoid chamber. They were typically 11m wide at the mid-point and 6m at the gates with an overall length of 30.5m.[1] Riquet also restricted the maximum rise to 2.9m so whereas previously he would have built one deep lock he instead used intermediate gates creating double, triple and sometimes quadruple chambers. During the Canal du Midi modernisation program of the 1970s several of these multiple chambers were converted into single "deep" locks with concrete side walls.

The lock gates were originally made of oak in the traditional mitre pattern with balance beams and each gate had a single large wooden sluice drawn up by a vertical screw.[1] The introduction of electric and hydraulic systems for both the lifting of the sluices and the opening of the gates has seen the removal of the balance beams and modern gates are of metal construction.

At each lock there is a double-fronted two-storey lock keeper's house upon which is fixed either a cast iron or a masonry sign showing the name of the lock and the name and distance to the adjacent locks in each direction. The locks are still operated by lock keepers and passage is only possible when they are in attendance however on La Nouvelle branch operation by boaters is allowed. The locks are open every day except 1 January, 11 November and 25 December, from 08:00 until 17:30 out of season and 08:00 until 19:00 in the summer peak; all locks are closed 12:30 – 13:30 for lunch.[2]

Profile

At its western end, Toulouse, the canal is at an altitude of 132 metres (433 ft) and climbs to 193 metres (633 ft) at its summit level between Ocean Lock and Mediterranee Lock west of Castelnaudary before dropping down to sea level at Sète.[3] The graph shows the profile of the Canal du Midi from Toulouse (1), through the summit of the canal at Seuil de Naurouze (2), Castelnaudary (3), then Carcassonne (4) and Trèbes (5). The channel continues to Béziers just after Fonsérannes Lock (6), and then on to Agde (7) before flowing in to the Bassin de Thau at Sète (8).

At 193 metres (633 ft), Naurouze is the highest point of the canal with a drop of 57.18 metres (187.6 ft) between the summit and Toulouse and 189.43 metres (621.5 ft) between the summit and Sète. The longest pound is 53.49 kilometres (33.24 mi) between Argens Lock (Aude) and the Fonsérannes Lock (Hérault) while the shortest reach is 250 metres (820 ft) between two locks at Fresquel.[4].

List of locks

The following list numbers the locks from the Canal lateral a la Garonne in the west to the Bassin du Thau in the east. Staircase locks are counted as a single entity but the number of individual chambers in the flight is noted. Travelling west - east from Toulouse to Sète the locks numbered 1–18 are ascending and 19–86 are descending.[B]

Lock number(s) [A] Lock name Coordinates
(with links to maps and satellite images)
Number of chambers Distance from Toulouse (km) Image Altitude (metres)[3]
1 Béarnais Lock 1 1.1 135m
2 Minimes Lock 1 2 139m
3 Bayard Lock 1 3.6 145m
4 Castanet Lock 1 15.7 148m
5 Vic Lock 1 17.4 151m
6 Montgiscard Lock 1 24.9 159m
7 Aygues-Vives Lock 1 28.1 159m
8 - 9 Sanglier Lock 2 29.6 163m
10 Négra Lock 1 33.3 166m
11 - 12 Laval Lock 2 37.5 170m
13 Gardouch Lock 1 38.9 173m
14 Renneville Lock 1 43.0 176m
15 - 16 Encassan Lock 2 45.9 185m
17 Emborrel Lock 1 47.5 189m
18 Océan Lock 1 51.6 193m
Summit of the canal
19 Méditerranée Lock 1 56.6 193m
20-21 Roc Lock 2 57.5 189m
22 -24 Laurens Lock 3 58.7 180m
25 Domergue Lock 1 59.7 175m
26 Laplanque Lock 1 60.9 173m
27 - 30 Saint-Roch Lock 4 65.4 170m
31 - 32 Gay Lock 2 67.1 159m
33 - 35 Vivier Lock 3 68.7 154m
36 Guilhermin Lock 1 69.1 147m
37 Saint-Sernin Lock 1 69.7 145m
38 Guerre Lock 1 70.6 141m
39 Peyruque Lock 1 71.7 139m
40 Criminelle Lock 1 72.2 137m
41 Tréboul Lock 1 73.6 134m
42 Villepinte Lock 1 77.4 130m
43 Sauzens Lock 1 79 127m
44 Bram Lock 1 80.3 126m
45 Béteille Lock 1 85.9 123m
46 Villeséquelande Lock 1 93.4 122m
47 - 48 Lalande Lock 2 98.2 116m
49 Herminis Lock 1 98.5 114m
50 Ladouce Lock 1 99.9 109m
51 Carcassonne Lock 1 105.5 106m
52 Saint-Jean Lock 1 108.0 102m
53 - 54 Fresquel Double Lock 2 108.8 97m
55 Fresquel Single Lock 1 109.0 92m
56 Evêque Lock 1 112.6 91m
57 Villedubert Lock 1 113.4 86m
58 - 60 Trèbes Lock 3 118 84m
61 Marseillette Lock 1 127.2 79m
62 - 64 Fonfile Lock 3 130.4 76m
65 - 66 Saint-Martin Lock 2 131.6 67m
67 - 68 Aiguille Lock 2 133.4 59m
69 - 70 Puichéric Lock 2 136.4 57m
71 Jouarres Lock 1 142.7 49m
72 Homps Lock 1 146.4 46m
73 - 74 Ognon Lock 2 147.1 41m
75 - 76 Pechlaurier Lock 2 149.8 38m
77 Argens Lock 1 152.3 32m
78[B] Fonserannes Lock 6 (+2 unused) 206.6 32m
79 Orb Lock 1 208.0 12m
80 Béziers Lock 1 208.4
81 Ariège Lock 1 212.5 9m
82 Villeneuve Lock 1 213.8 6m
83 Portiragnes Lock 1 218.3 5m
84 Agde Round Lock[C] 1 231.4 4m
85 Prades Lock 1 232.9 3m
86 Bagnas Lock 1 235.3 2m

See also

Notes

A Lock numbers are as given in the appendix of the 1994 edition From Sea to Sea by L.T.C. Rolt
B The flight at Fonserannes was "replaced" by a water slope in 1984 hence the single "lock number". However, the slope has never worked and the 6 flight staircase remains the only way to pass through meaning that there are 91 locks but only 86 numbers.
C Chamber has three sets of gates, the third being the junction with the branch descente dans l'Hérault

References

  1. ^ a b c Rolt, L. T. C. (1973). From Sea to Sea: An Illustrated History of the Canal du Midi. Allen Lane. ISBN 2-910185-02-08. 
  2. ^ "Les horaires de navigation". Voies navigables de France website. http://www.vnf.fr/vnf/content.vnf?action=content&occ_id=31118&son_id=31120. Retrieved 2008-10-25. 
  3. ^ a b "Toutes les Écluses du Canal du Midi". canaldumidi.com. http://www.canaldumidi.com/Geographie/Ecluses.php. Retrieved 2008-10-25. 
  4. ^ René Gast, Le canal du Midi et les voies navigables de l'Atlantique à la Méditerranée, éditions Ouest-France, 2000, ISBN 2-7373-2475-0, p. 22