Triage-Lavoir de Péronnes

Triage-Lavoir of Péronnes
Triage-Lavoir de Péronnes
Renovated_triage-lavoir-de-peronnes_hainaut_belgium_2010_march_DSC3765.jpg
The partly renovated coal washing facility of Péronnes-lez-Binche (March 20, 2003)
Location within Belgium
General information
Type Industrial
Location Péronnes-lez-Binche, Binche, Hainaut, Belgium
Address rue des Mineurs 31
Town or city Binche
Country Belgium
Coordinates
Construction started 1954
Completed 1954
Renovated 2005 - present[1]
Renovation cost 20 million euros
Height 40 m (130 ft)
Technical details
Floor area 20,000 m2 (220,000 sq ft)
Design and construction
Owner SA Triage Lavoir du Centre (including the companies IDEA, IMMOCITA, IPW, SPAQuE, TPF)

Triage-Lavoir de Péronnes is a former coal washing facility that was built with the help of the Marshall Plan in 1954. It was built for the demand of the coal industry to process the coal coming from the mines of Péronnes, Ressaix and Trivières. It was capable processing over 3,000 tons of coal daily. In 1969 the nearby coal mines in Saint-Albert and Sint-Margriete were closed, which caused Triage-Lavoir to become useless, and it was closed down after only 15 years of active operation.[2] Immediately after closing the facility, all the machines and equipments were removed and the facility stayed abandoned for over 3 decades.

The building was under threat of demolition in 2000[3] but on May 15, 2003, it was classified as a monument to be saved.

Currently the building is under renovation financed by the European Union and the Walloon Region through the Marshall Plan of Wallonia program.[4] The renovation started in September 2005.[1][5] The renovation of the exterior of the building was scheduled to be finished by September of 2006.[1] The budget for the walls was 2.1 million euros. In the spring of 2010 the renovation work was still in progress. The exterior and a small fraction of the ground floor has been rebuilt. Certain parts of the old building will be left untouched, other than cleaning and careful restoring, in order to preserve the building's unique architectural elements. Inside the back of the building, half buried in the ground, new storage rooms will be built for the companies to use.[4]

The renovated building is supposed host several organisations, including The General Archives of the Royalty (intermediate centre of archives), Royal Institute of Natural Sciences of Belgium (stores coal and fossil core-samples), the IFAPME (center of professional development: contemporary artwork, design) and some private offices.[1]

In Music

References

External links