Site overview

The puits N°26 des Fresnais at Trélazé, Maine-et-Loire, carries a metal headframe similar in form to that of the adjacent puits N°25, together constituting the two remaining chevalements from the Fresnais sector of the ardoisières of Trélazé. The Fresnais exploitation, along with the Grands-Carreaux, formed the two principal underground extraction areas of the Ardoisières d'Angers at Trélazé. The Fresnais sector operated via both underground puits, of which the puits N°26 formed part, and a 3-kilometre descenderie that by 2007 was producing 6,000 tonnes of schiste ardoisier per year.

The usine des Fresnais on the same site handled the transformation of slate blocks into finished products. The Fresnais descenderie closed in 2009. The Ardoisières d'Angers — controlled by Imerys — announced definitive closure on 25 November 2013 and the last workers left on 29 March 2014.

The puits N°26 headframe is named by Wikipedia among the six surviving chevalements of Trélazé, paired with the puits N°25 as two similar structures from the same sector.

The paired headframes stand within the former industrial landscape of the Fresnais site, where they remain prominent markers of a once extensive slate-working complex.

Map & photo

Ardoisières de Trélazé — Puits n° 26 des Fresnais mine headframe or winding tower site
Photograph taken: 9 May 2026
Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.

History

The Fresnais sector of the ardoisières of Trélazé was one of the two major underground extraction sites of the Société des Ardoisières d'Angers in the late twentieth century, alongside the Grands-Carreaux. Slate extraction at Trélazé is documented from the ninth century, with the first recorded open-cast quarry at Tire-Poche in 1406. The Commission des Ardoisières d'Angers was formed in 1891 and became the Société des Ardoisières d'Angers in 1963.

Open-cast working ceased entirely in 1899. The Fresnais exploitation was organised around a complex of underground puits, including the puits N°25 and puits N°26, and a 3-kilometre descenderie. The usine des Fresnais was the processing facility where slate blocks extracted from the underground workings were split, trimmed, and prepared for despatch.

At the end of the 1960s the Ardoisières d'Angers represented 60 per cent of French slate production and operated sites at Trélazé, Combrée, La Pouëze, Saint-Saturnin, Renazé, and Ploermel. By 2007, the Fresnais site produced 6,000 tonnes per year while the Grands-Carreaux produced 9,000 tonnes, for a combined company capacity of 15,000 tonnes with 220 employees, 60 of them underground. The Fresnais descenderie closed in 2009.

From that year the puits N°7 de Monthibert at the Grands-Carreaux was the sole active extraction point in France. The production decline had been continuous: from 80,000 tonnes in 1982 to 40,000 tonnes in 1990, 25,000 tonnes in 1997, and 15,000 tonnes in 2007. On 25 November 2013 the Ardoisières d'Angers announced closure, citing exhaustion of the gisement; the company employed 153 workers at that date.

The plan social was signed 28 March 2014 and definitive closure was effective from 29 March 2014, ending 123 years of continuous operation. The metal headframe of the puits N°26 des Fresnais is among the six chevalements métalliques identified by Wikipedia as surviving from the eight that once stood at Trélazé. The puits N°25 and N°26 headframes stand as a paired industrial monument on the former Fresnais carreau.

The former ardoisière territory at Trélazé was classified as a zone naturelle d'intérêt écologique, faunistique et floristique following closure.

Timeline

Operation

Fresnais site produces 6,000 tonnes per year via descenderie; usine des Fresnais in operation

By 2007 the Fresnais exploitation produced 6,000 tonnes per year via its 3-kilometre descenderie. The usine des Fresnais processed blocks of schiste ardoisier into finished ardoises. The puits N°26 formed part of the underground puits infrastructure of the Fresnais sector.
1406
Exploration

First recorded open-cast quarry at Trélazé

The first documented open-cast quarry at Tire-Poche at Trélazé is recorded in 1406.
1891
Legislation

Commission des Ardoisières d'Angers formed; becomes Société des Ardoisières d'Angers in 1963

In 1891 the principal Trélazé producers formed the Commission des Ardoisières d'Angers. In 1963 this became the Société des Ardoisières d'Angers.
1899
Operation

Last open-cast quarries close; all extraction underground

The last open-cast quarries at Trélazé closed in 1899. All extraction became underground from this date.
2009
Closure

Fresnais descenderie closed

In 2009 the Fresnais descenderie was closed, ending extraction at the Fresnais sector. The Grands-Carreaux puits N°7 de Monthibert then became the sole active extraction point in France.
2013–2014
Closure

Ardoisières d'Angers announces definitive closure; effective 29 March 2014

On 25 November 2013 the Ardoisières d'Angers announced closure citing exhaustion of the gisement. 153 employees were affected. The plan social was signed 28 March 2014; definitive closure effective 29 March 2014.
2014
Heritage

Metal headframe survives as one of six remaining Trélazé chevalements; site classified as ZNIEFF

The metal headframe of the puits N°26 des Fresnais is identified by Wikipedia among the six surviving chevalements of the eight that once stood at Trélazé. It stands paired with the puits N°25 headframe on the former Fresnais carreau. The site was classified as a zone naturelle d'intérêt écologique, faunistique et floristique.

Sources and records

Wikipedia (French): Ardoisières de Trélazé
Wiki-Anjou: Ardoisières de Trélazé
Patrimoine-minier.fr, Ardoisières du Nord-Ouest section, puits 25 et 26 des Fresnais entry
Exxplore website, Ardoisières du Nord-Ouest section, puits 25 et 26 des Fresnais entry
Minespatrimoine.fr, chevalements subsistants en France, puits N°26 des Fresnais entry
Archives municipales de Trélazé / musée numérique de Trélazé, fonds photographiques (15 J 606 photographies des Fresnais)
Furcy Soulez Larivière, Les Ardoisières d'Angers, Editions Chambellay, 1986
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