In Rohars, on the banks of the Loire estuary, a new semaphore is currently being designed. Conceived by artist Vincent Mauger, the artwork is situated within a historically rich site, between crystallized ruins and an open landscape, and is currently undergoing an in-depth project phase.
The future Rohars Semaphore will join a constellation of five artworks already installed along the estuary. Its uniqueness lies in its location: at the very heart of the site’s crystallized ruins, where layers of the past converse with the contemporary landscape. Designed as a gateway to the discovery of Rohars and the estuary, the artwork will offer new perspectives, at different heights, inviting visitors to interpret the territory in a new way. More than a simple belvedere, the semaphore acts as a device for revealing the site, balancing preservation and openness.
Project Phase: Model, Scale, and Perception
Prior to any fabrication, the project phase holds a central position. Through the study of models and volumes, the challenge is to find the right balance between architectural presence and sensitive integration into the existing ruins. Each formal choice questions the relationship to the ground, to verticality, and to the vanishing lines towards the estuary. The model then becomes a tool for dialogue: between the artist, the site, and technical constraints. A fine-tuning process, where the architecture of the semaphore seeks to enter into symbiosis with its environment, enriching the interpretation of the place without ever imposing itself.



