France for visitors

Inland Brittany: The Nantes–Brest Canal
France > Brittany > Nantes–Brest Canal

The Nantes–Brest canal is a meandering chain of waterways from Finistère to the Loire, interweaving rivers with stretches of canal built at Napoléon's instigation to bypass the belligerent English fleets off the coast. Finally completed in 1836, it came into its own at the end of the nineteenth century as a coal, slate and fertilizer route. The building of the dam at Lac Guerlédan in the 1920s chopped the canal in two, leaving a whole section unnavigable by barge. Road transport had by then already superseded water haulage, but modern tourism has breathed life back into the canal.

En route the canal passes through riverside towns, such as Josselin and Malestroit, that long predate its construction; commercial ports and junctions – Pontivy, most notably – that developed in the nineteenth century because of it; the old port of Redon, a patchwork of water, where the canal crosses the River Vilaine; and a sequence of scenic splendours, including the string of lakes around the Barrage de Guerlédan, near Mur-de-Bretagne. As a focus for exploring inland Brittany, whether by barge, bike, foot or all three, the canal is ideal. Not every stretch is accessible, but there are detours to be made away from it, such as into the wild and desolate Monts d'Arrée to the north of the canal in Finistère.


Pages in section ‘Nantes–Brest Canal’: Finistère stretch, Gouarec to Redon.

Sponsored links:0 - DHTML Menu By Milonic JavaScript

  © Rough Guides 2008  About this website