Alésia station explained

Alésia
Style:Paris Métro
Address:73, av. du Général Leclerc
82, av. du Général Leclerc
205, av. du Maine
230, av. du Maine
14th arrondissement of Paris
Borough:Île-de-France
Country:France
Coordinates:48.8283°N 2.3267°W
Owned:RATP
Operator:RATP
Zone:1
Map Type:France Paris

Alésia (in French pronounced as /alezja/) is a station of the Paris Métro on line 4 in the 14th arrondissement situated in Petit-Montrouge quarter.

Location

The station is located under the Place Victor-et-Hélène-Basch and its surroundings, dominated by the Saint-Pierre-de-Montrouge church. It is located at the intersection of Avenue du Maine, Avenue General Leclerc and Rue d'Alésia, between the Porte d'Orleans and Mouton-Duvernet metro stations.

History

The line 4 platforms were opened on 30 October 1909 when the southern section of the line opened between Raspail and Porte d'Orléans. The name refers to Rue d'Alésia, named for the Battle of Alesia between the Gauls of Vercingetorix and the Romans of Julius Caesar.

Recently this station has been retrofitted with platform screen doors, due to the RATP working on the line 4's automation.

This stop is featured in the animated films The Twelve Tasks of Asterix, in the chapter named Survive the Cave of the Beast. The choice of this station is due to the origin of its name.

It saw 5,113,245 travelers enter in 2018, which places it at the 88th position of metro stations for its usage.[1]

Passenger services

Access

The station has six entrances:

Station layout

Street Level
B1Mezzanine for platform connection
Line 4 platform level
Northbound
Southbound toward Bagneux–Lucie Aubrac

Platforms

Alésia is a standard configuration station. The platforms are separated by the metro tracks in the center. The walls are curved and the roof is elliptical. The platforms are being worked on as part of the automation of Line 4. Up until 2016, it was laid out in yellow Ouï-dire style with lighting strips, of the same color, supported by fake curved shaped consoles. The direct lighting is white and, contrary to most of the light strips of this style, indirect lighting. The white ceramic tiles are flat and cover the walls, the roof and the tympans. Advertising frames were yellow and cylindrical. The platforms was also equipped with Motte style seats and yellow sit-stand benches.

Since the beginning of 2016, the tiles and the lightning strips of the Ouï-dire platforms were renovated from 11 January 2016 to 30 June 2017. Since November 2018, the station's docks have been completely renovated, fitted with platform screen doors as part of the automation of Line 4.

Bus connections

The station is served by the Lines 38, 62, 68, 92 and the urban service Lignes de bus Traverses de Paris of the RATP Bus Network and, at night, by the N14, N21 and N66 lines of the Noctilien network.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Trafic annuel entrant par station du réseau ferré 2018. data.ratp.fr. fr. 2019-11-25.