The system consists of 16 lines, identified by numbers from 1 to 14, with two minor lines 3b and 7b, numbered thus because they are branch lines split off from the original lines 3 and 7.
Brief technical points:
- over 200 km of track, over 300 stations
- circulation is on the right
- track gauge of 1.435 meters (standard gauge, like the French main lines) -- but trains are narrower than mainlines, so the Metro can run on mainlines but not vice versa
- power collection: third rail
- average distance between stations is approx 300 m
- lines 1, 4, 6, 11, and 14 are rubber-tired
- line 14 is driverless (fully automatic)
A second network of regional express lines, the RER (Réseau Express Régional) complements the network since the 1970s.
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2 Architecture 3 History 4 See also 5 References 6 External links |
1: La Défense - Château de VincennesExisting lines
2: Porte Dauphine - Nation
- First section opened December 13, 1900
- First section opened October 19, 1904
- Opened November 27, 1921 (then part of line 3)
- Detached from line 3 April 2, 1971
- First section opened April 21, 1908
- Converted to rubber-tired operation 1967
6: Charles de Gaulle-Étoile - Nation
- First section opened October 2, 1900 (then part of line 5)
- Converted to rubber-tired operation 1974
- First section opened November 5, 1910
- Opened January 18, 1911 (then part of line 7)
- Detached from line 7 December 3, 1967
9: Pont de Sèvres - Mairie de Montreuil
- First section opened November 8, 1922
11: Châtelet - Mairie des Lilas
- First section opened April 28, 1935
- Converted to rubber-tired operation November 8, 1956
- First section opened November 5, 1910 (as part of Nord-Sud line A)
- First section opened February 26, 1911 (as part of Nord-Sud line B)
- First section opened by CMP December 30, 1923 (then part of line 10)
- Opened after 1991
See also: Stations of the Paris Metro
One of the most famous aspects of the Paris metro are its wrought-iron art nouveau entrances by Hector Guimard, which have come to symbolize Paris although not very many remain in use (86 entrances by Guimard still exist).
The lines 1 through 10 where built by the Ville de Paris (city of Paris) and run by the CMP (Compagnie du Chemin de Fer Métropolitain de Paris).
A second company, "Nord-Sud" (Société du Chemin de Fer Electrique Nord-Sud de Paris) started up in 1910 and built two lines named A and B (now part of lines 12 and 13). "Nord-Sud" merged in 1930 with the CMP (line 11 and the "first" line 14 were completed after the merger). CMP became state-owned in 1948 and renamed RATP (Régie Autonome des Transports Parisiens).
Architecture
History
Line 1 was inaugurated on July 19, 1900, after decades of political wrangling over routes and construction. Short sections of the present lines 2 and 6 (then numbered 5) were completed in the same year to serve the world's fair.See also
References
External links