Site overview

The Puits Hottinguer at Épinac, in the north of the Saône-et-Loire department, was one of the principal coal workings of the Houillères d'Épinac and is unique in France. Shaft sinking began on 26 May 1863, and coal was reached on 17 November 1871 at 618 metres depth, making the shaft the deepest mine in France at the time of its commissioning. The defining feature of the site was its atmospheric extraction system, devised by engineer and director Zulma Blanchet, in which a piston travelling inside a tube 1.60 metres in diameter and 558 metres long — machined at Le Creusot — raised four and a half tonnes of coal in seven minutes per ascent.

To house these tall and complex installations, a Malakoff tower was built between 1872 and 1876, a form common in Germany but unique in France, combining the headframe and winding machinery within a single masonry building. Extraction by the tube ceased in 1887 following the death of Blanchet; cable winding continued until the shaft closed in 1936. An on-site power station, built in 1910, supplied electricity to Autun and Meursault.

After the closure, the buildings were purchased by the paint company Bitulac in 1948. A partial fire on 12 March 1989 damaged one wing, and the site was abandoned in 1998. Listed as a monument historique in 1992 and upgraded to classified status in October 2022, the site has been owned by the commune of Épinac since 2010 and is undergoing phased restoration.

Set on the edge of Épinac, the great masonry tower dominates a mixed small-town and former industrial landscape and remains strongly legible from its surroundings.

Map & photo

Puits Hottinguer mine headframe or winding tower site
Photograph taken: 19 February 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

Coal extraction at Épinac, long known as Épinac-les-Mines, was conducted under the Houillères d'Épinac concession over several generations. The Puits Hottinguer was the most technically remarkable of the shafts in this field, and its history is substantially documented from the earliest stages of sinking through to post-closure restoration.

Shaft sinking began on 26 May 1863. Progress was slow in the early years: by 1868 the shaft had reached 447 metres without finding workable coal. Coal was finally encountered on 17 November 1871 at 618 metres depth, within a seam four metres thick, reached after driving a cross-measure drift at the bottom of the shaft. At its commissioning the Puits Hottinguer was the deepest mine shaft in France.

Because conventional cable winding systems of the period could not reliably operate at such depths, the director Zulma Blanchet devised an atmospheric extraction system. The shaft, 4.25 metres in diameter, was divided into four compartments: the tube, ladderways, ventilation, and cable extraction. The atmospheric tube consisted of 485 steel-plate rings of eight millimetres thickness, with a total weight of 342,025 kilograms and a diameter of 1.60 metres, manufactured at Le Creusot. The pistons were in wood sealed with leather gaskets; the cage in steel had three decks. Ministerial authorisation for the atmospheric system was granted on 10 June 1873. The tube was installed during the mid-1870s, and the first successful trial run on 23 July 1876 saw the piston travel 558 metres in twenty minutes.

To contain the tall atmospheric machinery, a Malakoff tower was constructed between 1872 and 1876. This masonry building, unique in France, combined the headframe and the winding machinery in a single body, a form then common in Germany and Belgium. The central tower is square in plan, with four elevations each pierced by semicircular-arched openings on three levels, and two lateral wings extending on each side.

Before 1884, production remained modest: the atmospheric system proved difficult to operate reliably, an initial 40-horsepower steam engine was insufficient, and the seams encountered were not of high quality. Around 1884–1885, new discoveries at the 618-metre level improved the prospects and the atmospheric system settled into more reliable service. In 1880, a more powerful machine manufactured at Saint-Étienne was installed, substantially reducing lifting times. However, following the death of Blanchet in 1887, atmospheric extraction was abandoned and all winding thereafter was by cables. The tube was subsequently repurposed for ventilation and was dismantled in 1906; the tower received a new timber headframe and a steam winding engine, with extraction conducted by two cages in the remaining space.

In 1910 an electric power station was constructed on the site; it supplied current to Autun and Meursault. The colliery continued production through the early decades of the twentieth century. Basin-wide output records show 1,500 tonnes and 150 workers in 1838, growing to 191,500 tonnes and 1,215 workers by 1913, with a wartime peak of 292,545 tonnes in 1917 and still around 250,000 tonnes in 1928. The Puits Hottinguer ceased extracting coal definitively in 1936, thirty years before the complete closure of the Épinac coalfield. The basin produced its last coal at the Veuvrottes site on 28 February 1966.

At closure the surface installations were largely demolished elsewhere across the basin, but the masonry buildings of the Puits Hottinguer — the Malakoff tower, its two wings, the power station, and ancillary structures — were not demolished. They were purchased in 1948 by Bitulac, a paint manufacturer, which occupied the site and erected additional warehouses and offices. The company's presence preserved the fabric of the buildings while also partially altering them. On 12 March 1989 a fire in one of the pavilions caused serious damage to a wing, and the site was abandoned entirely in 1998, leading to deterioration through exposure and vandalism.

The heritage significance of the Puits Hottinguer had been recognised from an early date: it received visitors in the late nineteenth century, and in 1893 the Société de l'Industrie Minérale de France held its annual congress in Burgundy with the Hottinguer as its sole site visit. The mining company exhibited materials at the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1878. The tower was inscribed as a monument historique by arrêté of 26 November 1992. The commune of Épinac acquired the site in 2010. A rehabilitation committee involving the commune, the state, the DRAC, and heritage associations debated a multi-year restoration programme. Clearance work began in late 2012; an insertion training scheme from April to December 2013 repaired vaulting and roof timbers in the lateral wings; and in spring 2014 the company Dufraigne completed restoration of the four wings attached to the tower. Exterior renovation of the tower itself was carried out between 2015 and 2017. The site was upgraded from inscription to full classification as a monument historique by arrêté of 11 October 2022, covering the mine shaft and power station in their entirety. The commune's long-term project envisages the installation of artistic and cultural enterprises on the site, together with an eight-hectare photovoltaic plant on adjacent former storage ground. The surviving structures today are the Malakoff tower, its two wings — one of which was still without a roof in the early restoration period — a truncated chimney stack, the power station remains, and other ancillary ruins.

Timeline

1863
Construction

Shaft sinking begins

Sinking of the Puits Hottinguer commences on 26 May 1863 under the Houillères d'Épinac concession.
1868
Exploration

Shaft reaches 447 metres

By 1868 the shaft has reached 447 metres depth without yet encountering workable coal.
1871
Exploration

Coal seam reached at 618 metres

Coal is reached on 17 November 1871 at 618 metres depth within a seam four metres thick, after driving a cross-measure drift. The Puits Hottinguer becomes the deepest mine shaft in France.
1872–1876
Construction

Malakoff tower constructed

The masonry Malakoff tower — unique in France — is built between 1872 and 1876 to house the headframe and atmospheric extraction machinery within a single building, combining elements inspired by Belgian and German practice.
1873
Legislation

Ministerial authorisation for atmospheric extraction

Ministerial decree of 10 June 1873 authorises use of Zulma Blanchet's atmospheric tube extraction system at the Puits Hottinguer.
1876
Operation

First successful trial of atmospheric piston

On 23 July 1876 the atmospheric piston completes its first successful run, travelling 558 metres in twenty minutes.
1880
Construction

More powerful winding machine installed

A new, more powerful steam winding machine manufactured at Saint-Étienne replaces the original 40-horsepower engine, substantially reducing lifting times. This, along with new seam discoveries, enables production to grow from around 1884–1885.
1887
Construction

Atmospheric extraction abandoned, cable winding adopted

Following the death of Zulma Blanchet, extraction by the atmospheric tube is abandoned in 1887. All winding thereafter is conducted by cables at the 618-metre level.
1906
Construction

Atmospheric tube dismantled

The atmospheric tube, latterly used for ventilation, is dismantled in 1906. The tower receives a new timber headframe and a steam winding engine; extraction proceeds with two cages in the remaining shaft space.
1910
Construction

On-site electric power station opens

An electric power station is built on the Puits Hottinguer site in 1910, supplying current to Autun and Meursault.
1917
Operation

Peak wartime output recorded

A basin-wide extraction record of 292,545 tonnes is recorded for 1917.
1936
Closure

Puits Hottinguer ceases extraction

The Puits Hottinguer definitively ceases coal extraction in 1936, thirty years before the complete closure of the Épinac coalfield.
1948
Redevelopment

Site purchased and reused by Bitulac

The Bitulac paint company purchases the site in 1948 and establishes a paint manufacturing works, erecting additional warehouses and offices. The original mine buildings are preserved but partially altered.
1989
Closure

Partial fire damages wing of buildings

A fire on 12 March 1989 causes serious damage to one wing of the Puits Hottinguer buildings.
1992
Heritage

Inscription as monument historique

The Puits Hottinguer and its buildings are inscribed as a monument historique by arrêté of 26 November 1992.
1998
Closure

Site abandoned by Bitulac

Bitulac abandons the site in 1998, leaving the buildings vacant and exposed to deterioration and vandalism.
2010
Redevelopment

Commune of Épinac acquires site

The commune of Épinac becomes owner of the Puits Hottinguer site in 2010 and begins planning its restoration and reuse.
2012–2014
Heritage

Clearance and structural restoration of wings

From late 2012, clearance works begin. An insertion training scheme from April to December 2013 repairs vaulting and roof timbers in the lateral wings. In spring 2014 the company Dufraigne completes restoration of the four wings attached to the tower.
2015–2017
Heritage

Exterior renovation of the Malakoff tower

The exterior of the Malakoff tower is renovated between 2015 and 2017.
2022
Heritage

Upgraded to full classification as monument historique

By arrêté of 11 October 2022, the Puits Hottinguer and its power station are classified as a monument historique, superseding the 1992 inscription. The protected area covers the entire mine shaft complex including the central electricity station.

Sources and records

Wikipedia article (French): Puits Hottinguer
Ministère de la Culture heritage database (Mérimée): notice PA00113565
Musée du Patrimoine de France: Puits Hottinguer à Épinac
Fondation du Patrimoine: Puits Hottinguer à Épinac, project notice
Commune d'Épinac official website: Le Puits Hottinguer
Éphaistos journal (OpenEdition): Les vies du puits Hottinguer à Épinac (2024)
Apphim.fr: Musée de la mine d'Épinac
Autun Tourisme: Puits Hottinguer visitor information
Monumentum heritage register entry: PA00113565
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