User:Rcsprinter123/Lille tramway
Rcsprinter123/Lille tramway | |||
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Overview | |||
Native name | Tramway de Lille | ||
Locale | Lille, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France | ||
Transit type | Tram | ||
Number of lines | 2[1] | ||
Number of stations | 36[1] | ||
Operation | |||
Began operation | 1874 (horse), 1900 (electric) | ||
Operator(s) | Transpole | ||
Technical | |||
System length | 22 km (14 mi) | ||
Track gauge | 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in) | ||
Electrification | 750 V DC | ||
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The Lille tramway (French: Tramway de Lille) is a public transit system in the city of Lille in Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France. The tramway is often called the Mongy, after Alfred Mongy, the engineer who created the interurban lines that make up the current system. The system is operated by Transpole, the public transport operator for the Lille Métropole. Transpole also operates the Lille Metro, an underground and elevated VAL system, and 68 urban bus routes, all of which share a common ticketing system.
The tramway consists of two interurban lines, which form a Y-shape connecting central Lille to the nearby communities of Roubaix and Tourcoing, and has 36 stations.[1] These two lines are the survivors of very dense network that served the metropolis until the 1960s. After the closure in 1966 of the last line of the CGIT Lille network, the lines were the only tramway still in use in France, other than those of Saint-Étienne and Marseille, before the renaissance of French tramways from the 1980s.
The lines were built at the same time as the boulevards linking Lille to its two neighbours, and the lines run on reserved track within the boulevards for most of their length.[2]
History
[edit]<> There were 2 track gauges on the Lille - Roubaix - Tourcoing network, standard gauge (1,435 mm (4.708 ft)) used by the urban Lille network (successively TDN, TELB and CGIT) from its beginning in 1874 to its disappearance in 1966, and metre gauge (1,000 mm (3.3 ft)) for the ELRT and CEN lines between Roubaix and Tourcoing. <>
The first tram line in Lille was built 1874, and the electrification of the town system started in 1894. The current interurban lines were built in 1909. While most urban lines in Lille were abandoned after 1950, the Mongy remained in service as the backbone of the public transport network of the TCC, the predecessor of Transpole. Whilst the expansion of the Metro initially threatened the trams, they were kept in service.
The lines originally terminated in the street outside the Opéra de Lille, but was diverted into a tunnel and underground terminus at the Gare de Lille Flandres, offering interchange with both lines of the Metro. The system was renovated between 1991 and 1994, and new low-floor trams were provided. The system is metre gauge electrifed at 750 volts DC.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Se deplacer en tramway" [Travel by tram] (in French). Transpole. Retrieved 2017-10-25.
- ^ "Travel & Transport". La mairie de Lille. Archived from the original on 2008-01-31. Retrieved 2008-02-18.
External links
[edit]Media related to Trams in Lille, Roubaix and Tourcoing at Wikimedia Commons
- Transpole official website (in English)
Category:Transport in Lille
Category:Tram transport in France
Category:Metre gauge railways in France
Category:750 V DC railway electrification
https://web.archive.org/web/20171025153617/https://www.transpole.fr/cms/actualite/actus-des-reseaux/lapparition-des-tramways-dans-la-metropole-lilloise-des-chevaux-a-la-vapeur.html https://web.archive.org/web/20171025153559/https://www.transpole.fr/cms/actualite/actus-des-reseaux/le-premier-tramway-electrique-et-la-revolution-du-rail-en-ligne-droite.html