Brécourt

Brécourt
Part of Nazi Germany
Équeurdreville-Hainneville, Manche,
Normandy, France
Rear view of the incomplete launching ramp for German V-1 flying bombs, at Brécourt, Cherbourg, 12 July 1944. Note the camouflage netting suspended over the site.
Site information
Type
OwnerFrench Navy
Open to
the public
No
Conditionruins
Location
Brécourt
Coordinates49°39′7″N 1°40′12″W / 49.65194°N 1.67000°W / 49.65194; -1.67000
Site history
Built
  • 1932 French oil storage cisterns
  • July–December 1943 V-2 facility
  • 1943–1944 Nazi Germany V-1 launch facility
Built forV-1 launch facility
Built byOrganization Todt
In usenever used
MaterialsReinforced concrete
Battles/warsOperation Crossbow
Events
  • Bombed 11 November 1943
  • Captured July 1944
DesignationsMonument historique
Official nameRampe de lancement de V1 de Brécourt
TypeLaunching pad
Designated23 February 1995
Reference no.PA00135509

Brécourt was a Nazi Germany V-1 launching pad in Équeurdreville-Hainneville near Cherbourg, in Manche of Normandy, northern France. It was by far the largest V-1 launch complex ever built by the Luftwaffe, and the only one to feature two launching pads from the outset: one protected, the other underground. It was also the only large site to have been successively assigned to two different V-weapons: from July to December 1943 to the V-2 rocket, and from January 1944 to the V-1 flying bomb.

Originally built by the French Navy as underground fuel oil storage tunnels, the Brécourt facility was repurposed during World War II by the German Army to store V-2 rockets. At the end of 1943, the Luftwaffe took over the site and used it as a launch pad for V-1 flying bombs to attack the Bristol harbour. The launch pad, though not fully completed, was captured by American forces in July 1944.