Gare de Lyon (Paris Métro) explained

Gare de Lyon
Style:Paris Métro
Address:20 bis, 25, 27, 28, Boul. Diderot
167, 175, 191, 201, 203, Rue de Bercy
Gare de Lyon (three)
12th arrondissement of Paris
Borough:Île-de-France
Country:France
Coordinates:48.8447°N 2.3739°W
Owned:RATP
Zone:1
Opened:
    Map Type:France Paris

    Gare de Lyon (in French pronounced as /ɡaʁ də ljɔ̃/) is a station on lines 1 and 14 of the Paris Métro. It is connected to the Gare de Lyon mainline rail and RER platforms within one complex and is the third-busiest station on the network with 30.91 million entering passengers in 2004, made up of 15.78 million on Line 1 and 15.13 million on Line 14.[1]

    Line 1

    The line 1 station was one of the eight original stations opened as part of the first section of line 1 between Porte de Vincennes and Porte Maillot on 19 July 1900. It was built with a length of instead of the 75m (246feet) length used for the stations of the line before their extension during the rebuilding of the line for rubber-tyre operation. The station was built cut and cover and is covered by a 23.9m (78.4feet)-wide metal deck, which supports the streets above.[2] It originally had four lines flanking two 6m (20feet)-wide platforms in order to accommodate the proposed circular line (then called Line 2), although this was never completed. From 1 August 1906 the northern terminus of Line 5 was temporarily located at the spare platforms, requiring a reversal at Quai de la Rapée. On 17 December 1906 Line 5 was extended to Jacques Bonsergent and the section between Quai de la Rapée and Gare de Lyon was closed.[2] The route of the closed line and the spare platforms at Gare de Lyon were used as part of a gauge railway, known as the Voie des Finances, operated by the Ministry of Finance to move currency from 1937 to 1957.

    The Line 1 platforms were raised during the weekend of 18 and 19 July 2009 as part of the line's automation.

    Line 14

    The station of Line 14 was opened on 15 October 1998. It is located south of the Gare de Lyon in the Rue de Bercy, next to the stations of RER lines A and D. It has two lines on either side of a large central platform. Between the eastbound lane from Olympiades and the RATP headquarters is an exotic garden.

    The STIF board of directors decided on 27 May 2009 to provide funding in 2010 for a third access in the middle of the platform to facilitate movement within the busy and relatively narrow station. This new access will join the existing bridge over the tracks, which currently provides access to the RER, but is not used to access Line 14. This would separate the flow of arriving and departing passengers.[3]

    Station layout

    GStreet LevelExit/Entrance
    B1Mezzanineto Exits/Entrances
    B2
    Westbound← toward
    Eastbound toward →
    B3
    width=100Northboundwidth=390← toward
    Southbound toward →

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Recueil de statistiques sur les transports en commun d’Ile-de-France (Collection of statistics on public transport in Ile-de-France). STIF. 16. PDF. French. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120617083121/http://www.stif.info/IMG/pdf/STIF_Les_chiffres_2005.pdf. 17 June 2012.
    2. Book: Tricoire, Jean. Le métro de Paris – 1899 – 1911 : images de la construction (The Paris Metro 1899–1911: images of the construction) . éditions Paris Musées . Paris. 1999 . 2-87900-481-0. French.
    3. Web site: Météor : quatre améliorations mises sur orbite (Météor: four improvements put into orbit) . MétroPole . 10 July 2009 . 13 September 2009 . French . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090916120141/http://www.metro-pole.net/actu/article1105.html . 16 September 2009 .