Avenue de la Liberté

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Looking north along Avenue de la Liberté from Place de Paris, which was inaugurated following renovation works in June 2021.

Avenue de la Liberté is a

Luxembourg station, and a bidirectional dedicated cycle-path on its western-side.[1][2] All this is flanked by two wide tree-lined paved pedestrian footpaths. Prior to the works, which formed part of Luxembourg City's efforts to reintroduce tram transport, the avenue was a four-lane arterial road
for motor vehicles with a one way designation for all traffic, excepting public buses.

Route

At its north end, the Avenue de la Liberté meets the Adolphe Bridge, which acts as a route for tram, motor vehicle, pedestrian, and bicycle traffic over the Pétrusse valley to join the Boulevard Royal in the city centre, Ville Haute.

The avenue's tramway, which forms part of the T1 line, is the location of two

tram stops
, "Place de Metz", and "Place de Paris/Paräiser Plaz".

One-quarter of the way down the road, it runs along the eastern side of the

ArcelorMittal, the world's largest steel-manufacturer. At its south, the street reaches the city's central station, where it becomes Place de la Gare, part of the N3
road.

References

  1. ^ "New bicycle lane on Avenue de la Liberté | Ville de Luxembourg". www.vdl.lu. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  2. ^ Chassaing, Guillaume. "Luxembourg : la place de Paris revit | Le Quotidien" (in French). Retrieved 10 July 2021.