Ascq station explained

Ascq station (French: Gare d'Ascq) is a railway station serving the former village of Ascq, now part of Villeneuve-d'Ascq city, Nord department, northern France.

History

In the nineteenth century the Industrial Revolution developed industry in northern France. Ascq was linked to Lille with the construction of the railway station in 1865, and in 1885 to Roubaix.

During the Second World War, numerous trains went through Ascq and members of the resistance regularly committed acts of sabotage. On 1 April 1944, after such an act of sabotage, the Nazis killed 86 men. This event is known as the Ascq massacre.

In the late 1990s, before the construction of a new Belgian high-speed railway line, Eurostar and Thalys trains going to Belgium went through Ascq station.

Services

The station is served by regional trains to Lille and Tournai (Belgium), and buses to Orchies.[1] Ilévia bus lines 13 and 73 serve the station.[2]

Trains garage

The railway station hosts a little train museum in the trains garage (halle aux trains) animated by the AAATV association. It houses a steam locomotive 141 TC 51 and an electric locomotive BB 12004 restored among many other train materials.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Plan des lignes TER Hauts-de-France. www.ter.sncf.com. fr. 21 April 2022.
  2. https://www.ilevia.fr/cms/institutionnel/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2022/04/PlanRESEAU-14mars2022.pdf Plan du réseau
  3. http://le-forum-du-n.forumotions.com/bourses-expositions-f12/portes-ouvertes-a-l-aaatv-ascq-t4646.htm