Built in 1960 in Belgium, L’Impressionniste is a barge with two special features. She was built in the Spitz-style, meaning she was originally intended to be pulled along the canals by horse, and she has a Luxe Motor-style bow, meaning she has a characteristic upsweep to the front and living quarters at the back. Her overall shape and proportions are a marriage of styles between Belgian and Dutch barges.
Following a lengthy career transporting grain and timber between Paris and Brussels, L’Impressionniste was converted into a hotel barge in 1996. Her new layout was based on hotel barge La Belle Epoque, which European Waterways had renovated a year earlier.
Originally powered by an eight-cylinder Deutz engine, she had a top speed of 16 kilometres per hour. However, in the year 2000, L’Impressionniste was given a higher-powered Scania 250 horsepower engine to navigate the strong currents of the River Rhône between Avignon and Agde.
After a decade of cruising the Rhône, L’Impressionniste was reassigned to her current route. Since 2010, she has cruised with European Waterways passengers on the picturesque Canal de Bourgogne.
English
Spanish
French
German
Norwegian
Portuguese
Swedish
Italian
Russian
Simplified Chinese
Japanese










