Tournemire - Roquefort to Le Vigan railway line explained

Tournemire - Roquefort to Le Vigan
Locale:France
Start:Tournemire - Roquefort
End:Le Vigan
Open:1896
Close:1952-1971
Linelength Km:61.780
Gauge:Standard (1435mm)
Linenumber:727 000
Electrification:Non-electrified
Map Name:map_name
Map State:uncollapsed

The line from Tournemire - Roquefort to Le Vigan is a former standard gauge, single track, railway line in the Aveyron and Gard departments of France.  It served the principal stations of Tournemire - Roquefort and Le Vigan.

It was assigned reference number 727 000[1] in the French national railway network.

History

The line was declared a public utility of general interest (as the second part of the Albi to Le Vigan line) by a law passed on 8 August 1879,[2] following discussions which considered three possible routes across the landscape of high plateaux and deep valleys:[3]

The first option followed the existing railway to Millau, then would use the Dourbie valley through Nant d’Aveyron, then the Arre valley to Le Vigan.  This route was strongly advocated by the council in Millau and local businesses, who argued that it would benefit the town of Millau and the important commercial interests in the Dourbie valley, including mines near Treves and the agricultural areas around Nant d’Aveyron, giving them the shortest route to the markets in the south and southeast.  However, this route would have been longer for the end-to-end Albi to Le Vigan regional route and more expensive than the second option.

The second option used the Cernon valley from Tournemire to reach the Larzac plateau, then through Sauclieres to the Arre valley.  This presented the lowest cost and shortest route between Albi and Le Vigan, although it included steep gradients, required many bridges and tunnels, and would only serve areas of low population.

The third and most southerly option would follow the Sorgue valley, then the Vis valley via Alzon.  This route was rejected without further discussion, on the basis of cost and additional route length.

The Cernon valley route was eventually selected, on the basis that this route minimised the length and cost of the legally required route between Albi and Le Vigan. It was considered that the Dourbie valley route would add distance and cost to the whole route which could not be justified.

A concession was awarded to the Compagnie des Chemins de Fer du Midi by a law of 20 November 1883.[4] The line entered service on 24 August 1896,[5] operated by the same company.

When the main French railway companies were nationalised on 1 January 1938, the Société Nationale des Chemins de Fer Français (SNCF) took over the line.

The line was closed to passenger traffic in 1939 and to goods traffic in several later stages:

It was formally declassified on the following dates:

At the end of the 1970s, the section from Tournemire - Roquefort to l'Hospitalet was refurbished by the army as part of the extension of the Larzac military camp. The abandonment of the extension of this camp in 1981 ended any hope of seeing any traffic on the line again.

Vélorail du Larzac

In 1999, an original idea was realised to use the track laid by the 5th Engineers to run a ‘vélorail’ system between Sainte-Eulalie-de-Cernon and Le Rouquet stations, over almost 5 km[9] .  In 2001 the activity began on the first part of the route and was named the ‘papillon’ (butterfly) route. Since then, with the renovation of the Sainte-Eulalie-de-Cernon (2003) and La Bastide-Pradines (2009) stations,[10] the route has been lengthened and runs from the Pradé Tunnel to Le Rouquet over 16 km.

Vélorails share the route with a shuttle train, or with the Larzac-Express tourist train.

Walking and Cycling Route 'Greenway' (Voie Verte)

A walking and cycling trail ('voie verte') known as the viaduct trail ('la promenade du viaduc') has been developed over a 3.5 km section from Cavaillac-Arre to Molières-Avèze.[11]

Infrastructure

The line had a very difficult gradient profile, with gradients up to 33‰.[12] The radius of the curves was limited to 300 m. The line includes many tunnels.

References

  1. Douté, Reinhard: Les 400 profils de lignes voyageurs du réseau ferré français, edited by La Vie du Rail in August 2011,, volume 2, page 85.
  2. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5493866w/f408.image.r=Tournemire Collection complète des lois, décrets, ordonnances, règlements, et avis du Conseil d'État, année 1879, page 411.
  3. 21-28 July 1879 . Seance du 26 juillet 1879 . Annales du Sénat et de la Chambre des Députés . Paris . IX . 220–222.
  4. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5492334w/f88.image.r=Tournemire Collection complète des lois, décrets, ordonnances, règlements, et avis du Conseil d'État, année 1883, pages 80 et 81.
  5. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6102857m/f109.image.r=tournemire Rapports et délibérations - Conseil général du département de l'Aveyron, année 1897, page 107.
  6. Journal Officiel de la république Française du 13 novembre 1954, page 10 677.
  7. Journal Officiel de la république Française du 18 novembre 1970, page 10 609.
  8. Journal Officiel de la république Française du 2 février 1972, page 1 278.
  9. Web site: 2018-01-24. fr. Sur les rails du Larzac. velorail.
  10. Web site: 2018-01-24. fr. Rénovation des gares. velorail.
  11. https://www.af3v.org/les-voies-vertes/voies/366-search_tag/
  12. http://wikimidi.railsdautrefois.fr/wikimidi/index.php?title=Tournemire-Roquefort_au_Vigan#Profils Profil en long de la ligne de Tournemire - Roquefort au Vigan