fbpx
Wikipedia

Tramways in Île-de-France

The Île-de-France tramways (French: Tramways d'Île-de-France) consists of a network of modern tram lines in the Île-de-France region of France. Twelve lines are currently operational (counting Lines 3a and 3b as separate lines), with extensions and additional lines in the planning and construction stage. Although the system mainly runs in the suburban regions of Paris, lines T3a and T3b run entirely within Paris city limits, and line T2 also does so for part of its route. While the lines operate independently of each other and are generally unconnected, some connections do exist: between lines T2 and T3a (at the Porte de Versailles station, since 2009), T3a and T3b (at the Porte de Vincennes station, since 2012), T1 and T5 (at the Marché de Saint-Denis station, since 2013), T1 and T8 (at the Saint-Denis train station, since 2014) and T8 and T11 Express (at two stations : Villetaneuse-Université and Épinay-sur-Seine, since 2009). However, the final design of the entire planned tram network is fairly integrated.

Île-de-France tramway
Overview
Native nameTramways d'Île-de-France
LocaleÎle-de-France, France
Transit typeLight rail/tram
Number of lines12
Number of stations235
Daily ridership1,098,000 per day 2019[1]
340 million per year 2019[2]
Operation
Began operation1992
Operator(s)RATP / SNCF / Transkeo
Technical
System length156.16 km (97.03 mi) (July 2022)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge for conventional lines
System map

Almost all lines (Lines 4, 9, 11 Express and 13 Express being the sole exceptions) are operated by the Régie Autonome des Transports Parisiens (RATP), which also operates the Paris Métro and most bus services in the Paris immediate area. Furthermore, while most lines use conventional steel-wheel rolling stock, two lines (T5 and T6) use rubber-tired trams. Moreover, line T4, which uses tram-train technology, is operated by the French national rail operator SNCF as part of its Transilien regional rail network. Line T11 Express, which also uses tram-train technology, is operated by SNCF's subsubsidiary Transkeo.

History

 
Trams of the former network, seen near the Pont au Change in central Paris

From 1855 to 1938, Paris was served by an extensive tramway network, predating the Paris Métro by nearly a half-century.[3] In 1925 the network had a 1,111 km (690 mi) length, with 122 lines.[citation needed] In the 1930s, the oil and automobile industry lobbies put pressure on the Paris Police Prefecture to remove tram tracks and make room for cars.[4] The last of these first generation tram lines inside of Paris, that connected Porte de Saint-Cloud to Porte de Vincennes, was closed in 1937,[5] and the last line in the entire Paris agglomeration, running between Le Raincy and Montfermeil, ended its service on 14 August 1938.[4]

Originally horse-powered, Paris trams used steam, as well as later pneumatic engines, then electricity. The funicular that operated in Belleville from 1891 to 1924 is sometimes erroneously thought of as a tramway, but was actually a cable car system. The first of the new generation of trams in Paris, the current Line T1, opened in 1992, with Line T2 opening in 1997 and Lines T3 and T4 in 2006. Lines T5 and T7, opened in 2013 while T6 and T8 opened in 2014. T11 opened in 2017, and T9 opened in 2021. While T10 is under construction joined by Lines T12 Express and T13 Express, the last parts of the former Grande Ceinture Line that are not covered by Line T11 Express.

Lines

 
Line T1
 
Line T2
 
Line T3a
 
Line T4
 
Line T5
 
Line T6
 
Line T7
 
Line T8
 
Line T9
 
Line T11 Express
Line Opening[6] Length Stations Operator Track system Technology
  1992[7] 17 km (11 mi)[citation needed] 36 RATP Conventional Tram
  1997[7] 17.9 km (11.1 mi)[citation needed] 24 RATP Conventional Tram
  2006[7] 12.4 km (7.7 mi)[citation needed] 25 RATP Conventional Tram
  2012[7] 9.9 km (6.2 mi)[citation needed] 18 RATP Conventional Tram
  2006[8] 7.9 km (4.9 mi)[8] 11[8] SNCF Conventional Tram-train
  2013[7] 6.6 km (4.1 mi)[7] 16[7] RATP Translohr Tram
  2014[9] 14 km (8.7 mi)[9] 21[9] RATP Translohr Tram
  2013[7] 11.2 km (7.0 mi)[7] 18[7] RATP Conventional Tram
  2014[9][10] 8.5 km (5.3 mi)[9][10] 17[9][10] RATP Conventional Tram
  2021[11] 10.3 km (6.4 mi) 19 Keolis Conventional Tram
  Planned in 2023 8.2 km (5.1 mi) 14 RATP[12] Conventional Tram
  2017 11 km (6.8 mi) 7 Transkeo Conventional Tram-train
  Planned in 2023 20 km (12 mi) 16 SNCF Conventional Tram-train
  2022 18.8 km (11.7 mi) 11 SNCF Conventional Tram-train
Total 173.7 km (107.9 mi) 253

T1

Line T1 currently connects Asnières-sur-Seine and Gennevilliers to Noisy-le-Sec, running almost parallel to the Paris city's northern limit. It opened in 1992 from Saint Denis's RER station to the Bobigny–Pablo Picasso Paris Métro station, where is located the prefecture building of the Seine-Saint-Denis department.[13] The extension from Bobigny to Noisy-le-Sec was completed in 2003. An extension west to Asnières-sur-Seine and Gennevilliers, connecting to western branch of Paris Métro Line 13, opened in 2012; a continuation towards Nanterre is planned. An eastwards extension to Montreuil and to the Val de Fontenay RER station is also planned.

T2

Line T2 (Trans Val-de-Seine) connects the bridge of Bezons (Pont de Bezons) to the Porte de Versailles Paris Métro station (near Paris's main exhibit grounds) via La Défense and Issy-les-Moulineaux business districts. It opened in 1997 between La Défense and Issy–Val de Seine station stations, mostly on a former SNCF line, the Moulineaux Line (which closed in 1993). An extension south, from Issy–Val de Seine station to Porte de Versailles, opened in 2009, while the second extension, to the north this time, opened in 2012 from La Défense to Pont de Bezons.

T3a and T3b

Line T3 is the first modern tramway line to actually enter Paris itself. It is divided into two sections, called T3a and T3b, separated at the Porte de Vincennes stop in order not to cut the road traffic there, despite rail and electrical infrastructure being present and operational. The line is also known as the Tramway des Maréchaux because it follows the Boulevards of the Marshals, a series of boulevards that encircle Paris along the route of the former Thiers Wall, built from 1841 to 1844. The boulevards are, with three exceptions, named for Napoleon's First Empire marshals (maréchaux).

T3a connects the Pont du Garigliano–Hôpital européen Georges-Pompidou RER station in the western part of the 15th arrondissement with the Porte de Vincennes Métro station in the 12th arrondissement. T3b connects Porte de Vincennes with the Porte de la Chapelle Métro station in the 18th arrondissement, this with an extension to Porte d'Asnières (17th arrondissement), opened in 2018. The extension opened on 24 November 2018.[14]

T4

Line T4 is an 8-kilometre (5.0 mi), 11-stop[8] tram-train line, operating in part on SNCF lines, connecting the Bondy RER station with the Aulnay-sous-Bois RER station. It opened on 18 November 2006. Unlike the other tramways in Île-de-France, Line T4 is operated by the SNCF. A new branch of this tram-train line, heading east towards Montfermeil, opened in 2020.

T5

Tramway T5[15] is a Translohr tram-on-tyres[16] running along a mainly segregated "track" on the busy Route Nationale 1 (similar to the systems in Nancy or Caen), replacing the often busy bus lines 168 and 268. The 6.6-kilometre (4.1 mi) route[16] serves 16 stops[16] between Saint-Denis, Pierrefitte-sur-Seine, Sarcelles and Garges-lès-Gonesse. It has an interchange with T1 at its southerly terminus marché de Saint-Denis and with RER D at its northern terminus, the Garges-Sarcelles RER station.[17] Line T5 opened in July 2013.[18]

T6

Tramway Line 6 is a 14-kilometre (8.7 mi) Translohr tram-on-tyres serving 21 stations, from the Châtillon–Montrouge Métro station (the southern terminus of Paris Métro Line 13) to the Viroflay-Rive-Droite Transilien station. The 1.6 kilometres (0.99 mi) serving at the western (Viroflay) end, is in a tunnel crossing the town from south to north, including two stops, namely the two train stations the city has, Rive-Gauche (Line C and Line N) and Rive-Droite (Line L). The majority of the current line opened in 2014, with said tunnel section opening in 2016. It replaced bus line 295, that became too crowded and slow for proper use.

T7

Tramway Line 7 is an 11.2-kilometre (7.0 mi) route serving 18 stations[7] between Villejuif–Louis Aragon (southwestern terminus of Paris Métro Line 7) and Athis-Mons, via Rungis International Market and Orly Airport. It opened in 2013[19] in order to both allow a supplemental rail service from Paris to Orly Airport and replace bus line 285, which had become overly crowded.

T8

Formerly known as Tram'y due to its opening-day Y-shape, this 8.46-kilometre (5.26 mi) line goes from the Saint-Denis–Porte de Paris Métro station to Épinay-sur-Seine—Orgemont, with a branch to the university campus of Villetaneuse, where it connects to the more recent T11 Express Line. An extension is also planned south, to Paris itself, at the Rosa Parks RER station. Construction of the line began in 2010; service began in 2014.[19]

T9

T9 is a tram line that runs between the Porte de Choisy Paris Métro station and the centre of Orly with a length of 10.3 km (6.4 mi) and 19 stops.

T11 Express

First "Express" tram line of the Parisian network — due to reusing the long-closed Grande Ceinture, with only a handful of stations — Line T11 Express serving as the first of three lines to cover the former Grande Ceinture rail line and offering eventually a second circular railroad service around Paris, something the Paris public transport system sorely lacked for many years.

Line T11 Express opened in 2017 between the Épinay-sur-Seine RER station and Le Bourget RER station, the middle part of its expected full route between Sartrouville and Noisy-le-Sec RER stations.

T13 Express

T13 Express is a tram-train line between Saint-Germain-en-Laye station (RER A) and Saint-Cyr station (RER C and Transilien lines N and U) with a length of 18.8 km (11.7 mi) and 11 stops. It opened on 6 July 2022.

Future lines

T10

T10 is a tram line currently under construction from Antony to Clamart in the southwestern suburbs of Paris with a length of 8.2 km (5.1 mi) and 14 stops.

T12 Express

T12 Express is a tram-train line currently under construction between Évry-Courcouronnes station (RER D) and Massy-Palaiseau station (RER B and C) via Épinay-sur-Orge station (RER C), with a length of 20 km (12 mi) and 16 stops.

Tvm

The Trans-Val-de-Marne bus line, which runs in a designated BRT corridor (bus rapid transit) and is intended to provide high-capacity, rapid transit southeast of Paris in the department of Val-de-Marne, is operated by RATP unlike most suburban bus lines. Despite beginning with a T, it is not a tramway. The RATP however considers it to be part of the T network, and is currently drawing plans for more BRT lines. The Tvm has been certified to be BRT with Silver Excellence in 2014.[20]

Network Map

 

See also

References

  1. ^ https://omnil.fr/IMG/xlsx/trafic_version_en_ligne_-_journalier.xlsx[bare URL spreadsheet file]
  2. ^ https://omnil.fr/IMG/xlsx/trafic_version_en_ligne_annuel.xlsx[bare URL spreadsheet file]
  3. ^ LE CHEVAL A PARIS DE 1850 a 1914 (in French). Librairie Droz. pp. 84ff. ISBN 978-2-600-04536-0.
  4. ^ a b Dominique Larroque; Michel Margairaz; Pierre Zembri; Association pour l'histoire des chemins de fer en France (2002). Paris et ses transports: XIXe-XXe siècles, deux siècles de décisions pour la ville et sa région. Recherches. p. 131. ISBN 978-2-86222-042-0.
  5. ^ Ralf Roth; Colin Divall (28 March 2015). From Rail to Road and Back Again?: A Century of Transport Competition and Interdependency. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 351ff. ISBN 978-1-4094-7115-8.
  6. ^ . RATP. Archived from the original on 2014-10-26. Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k . RATP. Archived from the original on 2014-10-26. Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  8. ^ a b c d "BIENVENUE SUR LA LIGNE T4" [WELCOME TO THE T4 LINE]. sncf.com (in French). SNCF Transilien. 2013. Retrieved 2013-09-13.
  9. ^ a b c d e f . RATP. Archived from the original on 2014-12-25. Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  10. ^ a b c "Paris opens tram Route T8". Railway Gazette International. 16 December 2014. Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  11. ^ "T9 : ouverture le 10 avril - transportparis - Le webmagazine des transports parisiens". transportparis.canalblog.com (in French). 2021-03-11. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
  12. ^ "Groupe RATP". October 11, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  13. ^ Trams return to Paris Trolley Wire issue 250 August 1992 pages 27/28
  14. ^ "Paris : Le tramway jusqu'à porte d'Asnières, c'est parti !". 23 November 2018.
  15. ^ "Tramway 5 - le T5 en ligne" [Tramway 5 - The T5 line] (in French). RATP. Retrieved 2013-09-13.
  16. ^ a b c [The T5 line - the project - essentials] (in French). RATP. Archived from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-09-13.
  17. ^ http://www.anous.fr/paris/traffic/un-nouveau-tram-en-banlieue/3897.html[dead link]
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-04-20. Retrieved 2013-09-12.
  19. ^ a b "Citadis remains popular in Paris". Railway Gazette International. 28 January 2011. Retrieved 2014-07-12.
  20. ^ "BRT Rankings - Institute for Transportation and Development Policy". www.itdp.org. 2014-07-24. Retrieved 2022-11-02.

External links

  • Official RATP website
  • Official SNCF Transilien website
  • Comprehensive map of the Paris tram network including track layouts (in French)

tramways, Île, france, Île, france, tramways, french, tramways, Île, france, consists, network, modern, tram, lines, Île, france, region, france, twelve, lines, currently, operational, counting, lines, separate, lines, with, extensions, additional, lines, plan. The Ile de France tramways French Tramways d Ile de France consists of a network of modern tram lines in the Ile de France region of France Twelve lines are currently operational counting Lines 3a and 3b as separate lines with extensions and additional lines in the planning and construction stage Although the system mainly runs in the suburban regions of Paris lines T3a and T3b run entirely within Paris city limits and line T2 also does so for part of its route While the lines operate independently of each other and are generally unconnected some connections do exist between lines T2 and T3a at the Porte de Versailles station since 2009 T3a and T3b at the Porte de Vincennes station since 2012 T1 and T5 at the Marche de Saint Denis station since 2013 T1 and T8 at the Saint Denis train station since 2014 and T8 and T11 Express at two stations Villetaneuse Universite and Epinay sur Seine since 2009 However the final design of the entire planned tram network is fairly integrated Ile de France tramwayTram on Line T3a in front of the Cite Internationale Universitaire de ParisOverviewNative nameTramways d Ile de FranceLocaleIle de France FranceTransit typeLight rail tramNumber of lines12Number of stations235Daily ridership1 098 000 per day 2019 1 340 million per year 2019 2 OperationBegan operation1992Operator s RATP SNCF TranskeoTechnicalSystem length156 16 km 97 03 mi July 2022 Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge for conventional linesSystem mapAlmost all lines Lines 4 9 11 Express and 13 Express being the sole exceptions are operated by the Regie Autonome des Transports Parisiens RATP which also operates the Paris Metro and most bus services in the Paris immediate area Furthermore while most lines use conventional steel wheel rolling stock two lines T5 and T6 use rubber tired trams Moreover line T4 which uses tram train technology is operated by the French national rail operator SNCF as part of its Transilien regional rail network Line T11 Express which also uses tram train technology is operated by SNCF s subsubsidiary Transkeo Contents 1 History 2 Lines 2 1 T1 2 2 T2 2 3 T3a and T3b 2 4 T4 2 5 T5 2 6 T6 2 7 T7 2 8 T8 2 9 T9 2 10 T11 Express 2 11 T13 Express 3 Future lines 3 1 T10 3 2 T12 Express 4 Tvm 5 Network Map 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit Trams of the former network seen near the Pont au Change in central Paris From 1855 to 1938 Paris was served by an extensive tramway network predating the Paris Metro by nearly a half century 3 In 1925 the network had a 1 111 km 690 mi length with 122 lines citation needed In the 1930s the oil and automobile industry lobbies put pressure on the Paris Police Prefecture to remove tram tracks and make room for cars 4 The last of these first generation tram lines inside of Paris that connected Porte de Saint Cloud to Porte de Vincennes was closed in 1937 5 and the last line in the entire Paris agglomeration running between Le Raincy and Montfermeil ended its service on 14 August 1938 4 Originally horse powered Paris trams used steam as well as later pneumatic engines then electricity The funicular that operated in Belleville from 1891 to 1924 is sometimes erroneously thought of as a tramway but was actually a cable car system The first of the new generation of trams in Paris the current Line T1 opened in 1992 with Line T2 opening in 1997 and Lines T3 and T4 in 2006 Lines T5 and T7 opened in 2013 while T6 and T8 opened in 2014 T11 opened in 2017 and T9 opened in 2021 While T10 is under construction joined by Lines T12 Express and T13 Express the last parts of the former Grande Ceinture Line that are not covered by Line T11 Express Lines Edit Line T1 Line T2 Line T3a Line T4 Line T5 Line T6 Line T7 Line T8 Line T9 Line T11 Express Line Opening 6 Length Stations Operator Track system Technology 1992 7 17 km 11 mi citation needed 36 RATP Conventional Tram 1997 7 17 9 km 11 1 mi citation needed 24 RATP Conventional Tram 2006 7 12 4 km 7 7 mi citation needed 25 RATP Conventional Tram 2012 7 9 9 km 6 2 mi citation needed 18 RATP Conventional Tram 2006 8 7 9 km 4 9 mi 8 11 8 SNCF Conventional Tram train 2013 7 6 6 km 4 1 mi 7 16 7 RATP Translohr Tram 2014 9 14 km 8 7 mi 9 21 9 RATP Translohr Tram 2013 7 11 2 km 7 0 mi 7 18 7 RATP Conventional Tram 2014 9 10 8 5 km 5 3 mi 9 10 17 9 10 RATP Conventional Tram 2021 11 10 3 km 6 4 mi 19 Keolis Conventional Tram Planned in 2023 8 2 km 5 1 mi 14 RATP 12 Conventional Tram 2017 11 km 6 8 mi 7 Transkeo Conventional Tram train Planned in 2023 20 km 12 mi 16 SNCF Conventional Tram train 2022 18 8 km 11 7 mi 11 SNCF Conventional Tram trainTotal 173 7 km 107 9 mi 253T1 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 1 Line T1 currently connects Asnieres sur Seine and Gennevilliers to Noisy le Sec running almost parallel to the Paris city s northern limit It opened in 1992 from Saint Denis s RER station to the Bobigny Pablo Picasso Paris Metro station where is located the prefecture building of the Seine Saint Denis department 13 The extension from Bobigny to Noisy le Sec was completed in 2003 An extension west to Asnieres sur Seine and Gennevilliers connecting to western branch of Paris Metro Line 13 opened in 2012 a continuation towards Nanterre is planned An eastwards extension to Montreuil and to the Val de Fontenay RER station is also planned T2 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 2 Line T2 Trans Val de Seine connects the bridge of Bezons Pont de Bezons to the Porte de Versailles Paris Metro station near Paris s main exhibit grounds via La Defense and Issy les Moulineaux business districts It opened in 1997 between La Defense and Issy Val de Seine station stations mostly on a former SNCF line the Moulineaux Line which closed in 1993 An extension south from Issy Val de Seine station to Porte de Versailles opened in 2009 while the second extension to the north this time opened in 2012 from La Defense to Pont de Bezons T3a and T3b Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Lines 3a and 3b Line T3 is the first modern tramway line to actually enter Paris itself It is divided into two sections called T3a and T3b separated at the Porte de Vincennes stop in order not to cut the road traffic there despite rail and electrical infrastructure being present and operational The line is also known as the Tramway des Marechaux because it follows the Boulevards of the Marshals a series of boulevards that encircle Paris along the route of the former Thiers Wall built from 1841 to 1844 The boulevards are with three exceptions named for Napoleon s First Empire marshals marechaux T3a connects the Pont du Garigliano Hopital europeen Georges Pompidou RER station in the western part of the 15th arrondissement with the Porte de Vincennes Metro station in the 12th arrondissement T3b connects Porte de Vincennes with the Porte de la Chapelle Metro station in the 18th arrondissement this with an extension to Porte d Asnieres 17th arrondissement opened in 2018 The extension opened on 24 November 2018 14 T4 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 4 Line T4 is an 8 kilometre 5 0 mi 11 stop 8 tram train line operating in part on SNCF lines connecting the Bondy RER station with the Aulnay sous Bois RER station It opened on 18 November 2006 Unlike the other tramways in Ile de France Line T4 is operated by the SNCF A new branch of this tram train line heading east towards Montfermeil opened in 2020 T5 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 5 Tramway T5 15 is a Translohr tram on tyres 16 running along a mainly segregated track on the busy Route Nationale 1 similar to the systems in Nancy or Caen replacing the often busy bus lines 168 and 268 The 6 6 kilometre 4 1 mi route 16 serves 16 stops 16 between Saint Denis Pierrefitte sur Seine Sarcelles and Garges les Gonesse It has an interchange with T1 at its southerly terminus marche de Saint Denis and with RER D at its northern terminus the Garges Sarcelles RER station 17 Line T5 opened in July 2013 18 T6 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 6 Tramway Line 6 is a 14 kilometre 8 7 mi Translohr tram on tyres serving 21 stations from the Chatillon Montrouge Metro station the southern terminus of Paris Metro Line 13 to the Viroflay Rive Droite Transilien station The 1 6 kilometres 0 99 mi serving at the western Viroflay end is in a tunnel crossing the town from south to north including two stops namely the two train stations the city has Rive Gauche Line C and Line N and Rive Droite Line L The majority of the current line opened in 2014 with said tunnel section opening in 2016 It replaced bus line 295 that became too crowded and slow for proper use T7 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 7 Tramway Line 7 is an 11 2 kilometre 7 0 mi route serving 18 stations 7 between Villejuif Louis Aragon southwestern terminus of Paris Metro Line 7 and Athis Mons via Rungis International Market and Orly Airport It opened in 2013 19 in order to both allow a supplemental rail service from Paris to Orly Airport and replace bus line 285 which had become overly crowded T8 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 8 Formerly known as Tram y due to its opening day Y shape this 8 46 kilometre 5 26 mi line goes from the Saint Denis Porte de Paris Metro station to Epinay sur Seine Orgemont with a branch to the university campus of Villetaneuse where it connects to the more recent T11 Express Line An extension is also planned south to Paris itself at the Rosa Parks RER station Construction of the line began in 2010 service began in 2014 19 T9 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 9 T9 is a tram line that runs between the Porte de Choisy Paris Metro station and the centre of Orly with a length of 10 3 km 6 4 mi and 19 stops T11 Express Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 11 Express First Express tram line of the Parisian network due to reusing the long closed Grande Ceinture with only a handful of stations Line T11 Express serving as the first of three lines to cover the former Grande Ceinture rail line and offering eventually a second circular railroad service around Paris something the Paris public transport system sorely lacked for many years Line T11 Express opened in 2017 between the Epinay sur Seine RER station and Le Bourget RER station the middle part of its expected full route between Sartrouville and Noisy le Sec RER stations T13 Express Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 13 Express T13 Express is a tram train line between Saint Germain en Laye station RER A and Saint Cyr station RER C and Transilien lines N and U with a length of 18 8 km 11 7 mi and 11 stops It opened on 6 July 2022 Future lines EditT10 Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 10 T10 is a tram line currently under construction from Antony to Clamart in the southwestern suburbs of Paris with a length of 8 2 km 5 1 mi and 14 stops T12 Express Edit Main article Ile de France tramway Line 12 Express T12 Express is a tram train line currently under construction between Evry Courcouronnes station RER D and Massy Palaiseau station RER B and C via Epinay sur Orge station RER C with a length of 20 km 12 mi and 16 stops Tvm EditThe Trans Val de Marne bus line which runs in a designated BRT corridor bus rapid transit and is intended to provide high capacity rapid transit southeast of Paris in the department of Val de Marne is operated by RATP unlike most suburban bus lines Despite beginning with a T it is not a tramway The RATP however considers it to be part of the T network and is currently drawing plans for more BRT lines The Tvm has been certified to be BRT with Silver Excellence in 2014 20 Network Map Edit See also EditList of tram stops in Ile de France Transportation in Paris Trams in France List of town tramway systems in France List of tram and light rail transit systemsReferences Edit https omnil fr IMG xlsx trafic version en ligne journalier xlsx bare URL spreadsheet file https omnil fr IMG xlsx trafic version en ligne annuel xlsx bare URL spreadsheet file LE CHEVAL A PARIS DE 1850 a 1914 in French Librairie Droz pp 84ff ISBN 978 2 600 04536 0 a b Dominique Larroque Michel Margairaz Pierre Zembri Association pour l histoire des chemins de fer en France 2002 Paris et ses transports XIXe XXe siecles deux siecles de decisions pour la ville et sa region Recherches p 131 ISBN 978 2 86222 042 0 Ralf Roth Colin Divall 28 March 2015 From Rail to Road and Back Again A Century of Transport Competition and Interdependency Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 351ff ISBN 978 1 4094 7115 8 RATP s tram network in Ile de France RATP Archived from the original on 2014 10 26 Retrieved 2014 12 16 a b c d e f g h i j k 2013 another year of the tram RATP Archived from the original on 2014 10 26 Retrieved 2014 12 16 a b c d BIENVENUE SUR LA LIGNE T4 WELCOME TO THE T4 LINE sncf com in French SNCF Transilien 2013 Retrieved 2013 09 13 a b c d e f 2014 the next year of the tram RATP Archived from the original on 2014 12 25 Retrieved 2014 12 16 a b c Paris opens tram Route T8 Railway Gazette International 16 December 2014 Retrieved 2014 12 16 T9 ouverture le 10 avril transportparis Le webmagazine des transports parisiens transportparis canalblog com in French 2021 03 11 Retrieved 2021 03 14 Groupe RATP October 11 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Trams return to Paris Trolley Wire issue 250 August 1992 pages 27 28 Paris Le tramway jusqu a porte d Asnieres c est parti 23 November 2018 Tramway 5 le T5 en ligne Tramway 5 The T5 line in French RATP Retrieved 2013 09 13 a b c le T5 en ligne Le projet L essentiel The T5 line the project essentials in French RATP Archived from the original on 2013 10 04 Retrieved 2013 09 13 http www anous fr paris traffic un nouveau tram en banlieue 3897 html dead link Home In Ile de France Extending the network Tramway Creations T5 Archived from the original on 2013 04 20 Retrieved 2013 09 12 a b Citadis remains popular in Paris Railway Gazette International 28 January 2011 Retrieved 2014 07 12 BRT Rankings Institute for Transportation and Development Policy www itdp org 2014 07 24 Retrieved 2022 11 02 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paris Tramway Official RATP website Official SNCF Transilien website Comprehensive map of the Paris tram network including track layouts in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tramways in Ile de France amp oldid 1130647544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.