La Chaux-de-Fonds / Le Locle, Watchmaking Town Planning
The site of La Chaux-de-Fonds / Le Locle watchmaking
town-planning consists of two towns situated close to one another in a
remote environment in the Swiss Jura mountains, on land ill-suited to
farming. Their planning and buildings reflect watchmakers’ need of
rational organization. Planned in the early 19th century, after
extensive fires, the towns owed their existence to this single industry.
Their layout along an open-ended scheme of parallel strips on which
residential housing and workshops are intermingled reflects the needs of
the local watchmaking culture that dates to the 17th century and is
still alive today. The site presents outstanding examples of
mono-industrial manufacturing-towns which are well preserved and still
active. The urban planning of both towns has accommodated the transition
from the artisanal production of a cottage industry to the more
concentrated factory production of the late 19th and 20th centuries. The
town of La Chaux-de-Fonds was described by Karl Marx as a “huge
factory-town” in Das Kapital where he analyzed the division of labour in
the watchmaking industry of the Jura.