Livet-et-Gavet


Livet-et-Gavet is a commune in the Isère department in southeastern France.

Population

Geography

Livet-et-Gavet is located Oisans on the Romanche halfway between Grenoble and winter sports resorts of The Alpe d'Huez and Les Deux Alpes. The town is also midway between Vizille and Bourg d'Oisans.
The town is located between the mountains of Belledonne and Taillefer Massif, and is served by the Provincial Road 1091.
The Lake Poursollet and village 1,649 meters above sea level, is part of Livet-et-Gavet and offers many from hiking in a sensitive natural

Localities

The topography of the site has led to the formation of several hamlets: The Clavaux, The Saliniere, Les Clots, the Ponants, The Roberts, and The Poursollet.
The three main villages that make up the town of Livet-et-Gavet are: Life, Rioupéroux, and Gavet.

Economy

Development

Livet-et-Gavet is a commune in the Isère department inhabited since ancient times. The town was an almost unavoidable destination for Romans to go to Italy. Then, in the 20th century, developed all over the Romanche numerous hydroelectric plants not only creating thousands of jobs, but also an entire industrial city with housing, railways, movies, schools, parks.
At the end of the industrial age, factories closed one by one, leaving the remains near the Romanche. The railroad is gone, and the road has been widened, but the population has suffered a slow decline.
Since the 1980s, the town is trying to recuperate with the help of the state, the region and the department of Isère. A museum has been established to remember the history of the Romanche Valley. Deviations Gavet Livet and help avoid city centers and to give them some fresh air.
Factories, as Pechiney to Gavet become FerroPem have been able to diversify and modernize to compete with industry metallurgy. Hydroelectricity thrives with the completion of EDF project Romanche-Gavet housing are rebuilt. The town worked hard cleaning and floral.
To date, a vast project directed and financed by the French company EDF has been launched. After ten years of preparation, this significant project of around 250 million Euros will aim to completely replace the existing hydroelectric plants producing the Romanche Valley, allowing both to increase renewable electricity in Isère, but in addition to redraw the landscape of the Romanche valley. A modern underground 92 MW plant will be built Gavet, connected by a tunnel of 9.3 km with a water dam outlet will be located upstream of Livet. This project is currently the largest in France in terms of hydro-electricity. An overview of the site and visible from the RD1091 bridge Inferent.
Eventually, the old power plants, non-recoverable, after more than a century of operation will be destroyed, and the riverbed will be redeveloped in order to develop tourism in the town of Livet-et-Gavet: paths, lake, bridge, landscape decoration etc. Discussions are underway to promote the heritage of the Valley so that these remains is a real asset in the future, an association, "Heritage for the Future", was created for this, and all ideas are welcome.
Today Livet-et-Gavet is undergoing economic transition and aims to become a charming alpine valley, modern, combining hydro-electric generation, natural biodiversity and ecotourism. Such issues are animated by the General Council of Isere, the town, the territory of the Oisans, or company EDF.

Personalities linked to the commune

Charles Albert Keller : Founding of a real industrial empire in the Romanche valley, he knew how to use the force of water to power the Romanche many hydroelectric plants valley but also power for the first time in transportation of ' electricity the City of Grenoble...

Trivia

The House of Charles Albert Keller.
The town was one of the places to shoot major film Crimson Rivers, including the home of Charles Albert Keller in impressive architectural part of the house, 4 storeys high and with a roof canted typical of the early 20th century, is built of stone, while the second, reinforced concrete, is built on large piles in a dominant position over the Romansh: there was the office of Charles Albert Keller, from which he could observe all of its workshops and factories located on both sides of the river.