The Varivol was an odd looking biplane with a deep and bulky fuselage with a knife edge rear where the rudder was attached and a braced variable-incidence tailplane was mounted on top of the rear fuselage. The unique feature of the aircraft were the two narrow-chord biplane wings in an inverted sesquiplane configuration. The wings were wire-braced and had one interplane strut on each side. The upper wing normally had an area of 6.3m2 but additional flexible surfaces inside the fuselage could be extended using an electrical motor to increase the wing area to 26m2. It was also possible to change the camber of the wings when extended. The Varivol was powered by a 2300NaN0 Salmson radial piston engine with a two-bladed propeller.
It was first tested in a wind tunnel at Chalais-Meudon before starting test flying in March 1936. The aircraft continued to fly successfully until November 1936 when it was destroyed in a fatal crash, an investigation determined the accident was not due to the variable-area wings.
Further development of the Varivol concept was carried out with the Gérin 1938 V.6E Varivol Racer a sleek monoplane racing aircraft that was built just prior to and during World War II, being put into storage after the war. The aircraft can be seen at the Musee Regional de l'Air at Angers in France.