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Nicolas Groleau

Skipper

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Nicolas Groleau

Nicolas Groleau is a shipyard man as much as a seaman. At 19, he began working in boatbuilding, steeped in the great Breton tradition of composite construction and custom work. The Great Storm of 1987 in Brittany: shipyards hired en masse, and Nicolas honed his craft there.

In 1996, he co-founded with Jean-Pierre Souviron the JPS Production yard in La Trinité-sur-Mer (Kemarquer industrial zone). The first boat rolled out of the hangars in 1998: an Open 7.50, the first in a series that established the JPS signature — sandwich composite infusion, tight tolerances, industrial production of race prototypes.

In 2005, Nicolas met naval architect Samuel Manuard. Their collaboration transformed the Class 40 class: from 2010, JPS began production of the Mach 40, the first in a lineage that still dominates the class today (Mach 40.1, 40.2, 40.3, 40.4, 40.5, 40.6). Since 2011, JPS Production has focused almost exclusively on Class 40s — at the 2019 Transat Jacques Vabre, the top four boats were built in their yard.

Alongside his work as a builder, Nicolas is also a amateur skipper. His personal mount: the Mach 45 Cartouche (later renamed BT Blue, ex-Bretagne Télécom), co-designed with Sam Manuard and launched in 2006. Building the boat he sails himself: the circle is complete.

Racing achievements: double winner of the Rolex Fastnet Race in IRC Canting Keel category under the name Cartouche, winner of the 2018 Armen Race IRC 1 under the Bretagne Télécom colors. A racing career that never hindered his yard’s production of Class 40 benchmarks — from the Mach 40.4 Redman to the Class 40 Crédit Mutuel #158 (first scow Class 40, 2019), through successive generations Edenred, IBSA, Solano, Swift and the most recent Mach 40.6 Bleu Blanc #205 (2024).

Official JPS Production website: jps-production.com.