Paris Métro Line 7
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Line 7 | |
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Mairie d'Ivry | |
Connecting lines |
standard gauge |
Electrification | 750 V DC third rail |
Paris Métro Line 7 is one of sixteen lines of the
Line 7 began operating in 1910 and, along with
At 18.6 km (12 mi), Line 7 is one of the longest in the Paris Métro network. In addition, it contains the most stations as well as being the fourth most-used line of the Métro, with 135.1 million riders in 2017.[1]
History
Chronology
- 5 November 1910: Line 7 was opened linking Opéra to Porte de la Villette.
- 18 January 1911: A new branch was opened from Louis Blanc to Pré-Saint-Gervais.
- 1 July 1916: The line was extended in the south from Opéra to Palais Royal.
- 16 April 1926: The line was extended from Palais Royal to Pont Marie.
- 15 February 1930: While a tunnel was being built on line 7 to cross the River Seine, a new section between Place Monge and Place d'Italie was opened and temporarily operated as part of Line 10.
- 3 June 1930: The line was extended from Pont Marie to Pont de Sully.
- 7 March 1930: That section temporarily operating as part of Line 10 was extended from Place d'Italie to Porte de Choisy.
- 26 April 1931: The section between Pont de Sully and Place Monge was opened. The section between Place Monge and Porte de Choisy was transferred to Line 7 and it was extended to Porte d'Ivry simultaneously.
- 1 May 1946: The line was extended from Porte d'Ivry to Mairie d'Ivry.
- 1967: Because of a lack of traffic, the northern branch of the line 7 between Louis Blanc and Pré-Saint-Gervais became a new independent line known as Line 7bis.
- 4 October 1979: The line was extended to the north from Porte de la Villette to Fort d'Aubervilliers.
- 10 December 1982: A new branch was opened to the south from Maison Blanche to Le Kremlin-Bicêtre.
- 28 February 1985 : The line was extended from Le Kremlin-Bicêtre to Villejuif Louis Aragon.
- 6 May 1987: The line was extended from Fort d'Aubervilliers to La Courneuve – 8 mai 1945.
Future
- An extension of Line 7 from La Courneuve to Le Bourgetmay be considered in the future.
- Line Château-Landonon line 7.
Route and stations
Route
Line 7 runs for 18.6 km (12 mi) completely underground, stopping at 38 stations. Southbound trains terminate alternately at Villejuif - Louis Aragon and Mairie d'Ivry, diverging at Maison Blanche. Late at night, through trains only operate to Mairie d'Ivry; a shuttle train to Villejuif originates at Maison Blanche.
In the north, the line begins at La Courneuve in the department of
Running below National Route 2 (RN2), the line heads to the south-west, entering Paris in two single-line tunnels so as to avoid a now-unused terminal loop at
Renamed stations
Date | Old name | New name |
---|---|---|
1 November 1926 | Pont Notre-Dame | Pont Notre-Dame – Pont au Change |
15 April 1934 | Pont Notre-Dame – Pont au Change | Châtelet |
6 October 1942 | Boulevard de la Villette | Aubervilliers – Boulevard de la Villette |
10 February 1946 | Pont de Flandre | Corentin Cariou |
Aubervilliers – Boulevard de la Villette | Stalingrad | |
1989 | Chaussée d'Antin | Chaussée d'Antin – La Fayette |
8 March 2007 | Pierre Curie | Pierre et Marie Curie |
Tourism
Metro Line 7 passes near several places of interest :
- The Parc de la Villette with the Cités des Sciences et de l'Industrie.
- The Opera Garnier.
- The Latin Quarter.
- The Louvre Museum
- Place d'Italie and the Butte aux Cailles.
- One of Paris' "Chinatowns" in the south of the 13th arrondissement.
See also
References
- ^ Les chriffres 2005 Archived 17 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine STIF Retrieved 23 October 2010 (in French)
- ^ Tricoire, Jean. Un siècle de métro en 14 lignes. De Bienvenüe à Météor
External links
- (in French) RATP Official Website (French)
- (in English) RATP English-language website
- (in English) Interactive Map of the RER (from RATP's website)
- (in English) Interactive Map of the Paris Métro (from RATP's website)
- (in French) Mobidf website, dedicated to the RER (unofficial)[permanent dead link]
- (in French) Metro-Pole website, dedicated to Paris public transport (unofficial)