Centuries-old Swiss foundry keeps Olympic bell tradition alive
Alois Huguenin holds a Olympic Games bell in his foundry, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Neuchatel, Switzerland, May 8, 2024. (AFP Photo)


The air is stifling hot, with a heavy, metallic smell that sticks in the throat and stings the eyes.

In his foundry, which has smoke-blackened walls, Alois Huguenin uses an enormous ladle to pour molten bronze at 1,250 degrees Celsius (2,282 degrees Fahrenheit) into a metal frame.

Alois Huguenin checks the sound of a bell in his foundry, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Neuchatel, Switzerland, May 8, 2024. (AFP Photo)

For three generations, the century-old traditional foundry in La Chaux-de-Fonds in northwestern Switzerland – the cradle of the country's famous watchmaking industry – has been crafting the bells used at the Olympic Games.

The bells are rung for a range of disciplines, including athletics, track cycling, mountain biking and boxing.

Almost half a century after his grandfather made the first bell for the Moscow Olympics in 1980, Huguenin was preparing the bells for the upcoming Paris Games.

"If all goes well, one Olympic bell is three hours of work," the 30-year-old, who is equipped with an apron, gloves and a protective screen, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) recently.

Huguenin said he had already delivered 38 bells for Paris at the request of the Games' official timekeeper, Omega, which has its chronometric testing laboratory in Biel, around 30 kilometers (18.6 miles) away.

"The bell is used to indicate to the athletes, as well as to the spectators when the last lap has started," said Alain Zobrist, who heads OmegaTime and is in charge of chronometry within the wider Swatch Group.

It tells the athletes "they must give it their all to reach the finish line as quickly as possible," he told AFP.

Recalling that Omega has been timekeeping at the Olympics since 1932, he acknowledged that the bells constitute "a very traditional element."

"Today, chronometry is done electronically. The bells are a nod to our past," he said.

Ten minutes after pouring the molten bronze – with the texture and bright orange-yellow color of volcanic lava – Huguenin can unmould the thick liquid, with a temperature at just 200 degrees Celsius.

Alois Huguenin is unmolding a bell in his foundry, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Neuchatel, Switzerland, May 8, 2024. (AFP Photo)

With heavy blows of his hammer, he breaks the hard, black-sand mould in the frame as smoke billows out.

The bell that emerges is covered with a crust, revealing the work that remains to be done: deburring, sanding, filing and polishing.

Huguenin made his first Olympic bell for the 2020 Tokyo Games.

While not as obsessed with bells as some collectors can be, Huguenin says he is proud his creations are seen by billions.

"I put the same energy, the same passion into all the bells I make," he said, explaining that he also makes bells for livestock, and increasingly for individual events like weddings.

"But to know that we are participating in our own small way in the big Olympic celebration is a source of pride."

Huguenin said Olympic bells had been part of his life as far back as he could remember.

"Each edition, we watch TV to try to see if we can spot them," he said, recalling how he kept an eye out for his father's bells when he was younger.

And "for a few years now, I have been looking out for the bell that I made."

One step ahead

The bells used for each Olympics remain the same, with only the edition logo changing.

They are always emblazoned with colorful Olympic rings, stand about 20 centimeters (7.9 inches) high and measure 14 centimeters (5.5 inches) across.

But each bell is nonetheless unique, Huguenin insisted, due to the use of traditional techniques, and recycling.

The clayey Paris sand used for his mould is not synthetic and is reused several times, he said, noting that some grains have been in service for 100 years.

As for the copper-tin alloy used for the bronze, it is made of individually-sourced recycled materials.

Models of bells used during the Olympic Games are seen in the headquarters of Swiss Timing, Corgemont, Switzerland, May 8, 2024. (AFP Photo)

On the shelves near his wooden workbench, Huguenin keeps a souvenir collection of bells with defects that were made for previous Games in Atlanta, Rio and Athens.

But a few weeks before the opening of the Paris Olympics, he already had one eye on the future.

Of course, bells need to be made for the 2028 Los Angeles Games, he said, but "first, there are the Winter Olympics in Milan Cortina" in 2026.

"I'm going to get started on it this autumn," he said.

"I'm always one step ahead."