Canal Latéral de la Garonne | |
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Specifications | |
Length | 193.6 km (120.3 mi) |
Maximum boat length | 40.5 m (133 ft) is max lock length. |
Maximum boat beam | 6 m (20 ft) is max lock width. |
Locks | 53 |
Maximum height above sea level | 128 m (420 ft) |
Minimum height above sea level | 0 m (0 ft) |
History | |
Construction began | 1838 |
Date completed | 1856 |
Date restored | During 1970s, locks lengthened to 38m |
Geography | |
Start point | Toulouse |
End point | Castets-en-Dorthe |
Beginning coordinates | 43°36′42″N 1°25′06″E / 43.61156°N 1.41827°E |
Ending coordinates | 44°33′50″N 0°09′20″W / 44.56387°N 0.15546°W |
Connects to | Canal de Brienne, Canal du Midi, Canal de Montech, Garonne River, Tarn River |
The Canal de Garonne, formerly known as Canal latéral à la Garonne, is a French canal dating from the 19th century which connects Toulouse to Castets-en-Dorthe. The remainder of the route to Bordeaux uses the Garonne River. It is the continuation of the Canal du Midi which connects the Mediterranean with Toulouse. Together they and the Garonne River form the Canal des Deux Mers which connects the Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic Ocean.
The canal skirts the right bank of the Garonne, crosses the river in Agen via the Agen aqueduct, then continues along the left bank. It is connected to the Canal du Midi at its source in Toulouse, and emerges at Castets-en-Dorthe on the Garonne, 54 km southwest of Bordeaux, a point where the river is navigable.
The canal is supplied with water from the Garonne by two routes:
With the exception of the five locks at Montech, bypassed by the water slope, all of the locks have a length of 40.5m and a width of 6m. The locks at Montech retained the old gauge of 30m.
Many bridges cross the canal including eighty-three overbridges. Many were rebuilt in 1933 to allow for the requirements of larger boats.
The canal has a width of 18 meters at the water level. It has 53 locks, with a total difference in level of 128 meters. Its mooring depth is 2.2 meters, and its draught 1.8 meters (although a practical maximum of 1.3 meters, especially at Castets-en-Dorthe, exists as of June 2017). The minimum headroom beneath bridges and other buildings is 3.6 meters.
Despite being inaugurated in 1856, the Canal de Garonne has been considered a possibility since ancient times.
Before the Canal du Midi was constructed, the passage between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea was along the Spanish Atlantic coast and through the Strait of Gibraltar. This route, more than 3,000 kilometers long, subjected sailors to the risks of attack and storms.