Bourg-la-Reine | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
General information | ||||||||||||
Location | Boulevard Maréchal Loffre Bourg-la-Reine France | |||||||||||
Coordinates | 48°46′49″N 2°18′45″E / 48.78028°N 2.31250°E | |||||||||||
Operated by | RATP Group | |||||||||||
Line(s) | Ligne de Sceaux | |||||||||||
Platforms | 2 side platforms 1 island platform | |||||||||||
Tracks | 5 | |||||||||||
Connections | ||||||||||||
Construction | ||||||||||||
Structure type | At-grade | |||||||||||
Accessible | Yes, by request to staff[1] | |||||||||||
Other information | ||||||||||||
Station code | 87758698 | |||||||||||
Fare zone | 3 | |||||||||||
History | ||||||||||||
Opened | 29 July 1854 | |||||||||||
Passengers | ||||||||||||
2019 | 4,446,499[2] | |||||||||||
Services | ||||||||||||
|
Bourg-la-Reine station (French: Gare de Bourg-la-Reine) is a railway station on the Sceaux line, located in the town of Bourg-la-Reine, Hauts-de-Seine, France.
Railway situation
The station is located at "Point Kilometrique"(PK) 12.9 (PK 0.0 being in Gare du Nord, end of the RATP part), at the junction of the branches of line B of the RER towards Robinson and towards Saint-Rémy-lès -Chevreuse. The station itself is made up of five tracks, four of which are contiguous to a platform:
- track 1 for trains going south, Massy – Palaiseau or Saint-Rémy-lès-Chevreuse;
- track 2 for trains going north towards Paris and coming from Massy – Palaiseau or Saint-Rémy-lès-Chevreuse;
- track 1a for trains going southwest towards Robinson;
- track 2a for trains going north towards Paris and coming from Robinson;
- track 4, a small siding located to the west of track 2a, along the platform but not contiguous, often used to park track surveillance trains.
At the north of the station, four sidings allow the parking of trains. Two (tracks 3 and 5) are quite long for 2 EMU Mi79/84 each; two others (tracks 7 and 9), shorter and integrated into a concrete slab, pass under a porch and are used to park construction trains. The station's rights-of-way include the flying junction, built in the 1930s, as well as the A and B sidings (sometimes used as sidings or for a U-turn) and the 3T siding, all located just north of the flying junction (about 300 meters from the end of the quays to the north).
History
This station has the particularity of constituting a Y, since it is common to the Robinson and Saint-Rémy-lès-Chevreuse branches, which separate shortly before, on the Paris side. During the renovation of the line by the Compagnie du chemin de fer métropolitain de Paris (CMP) in the 1930s, a flying junction was created to avoid conflicts between trains traveling in the opposite direction at the junction. .
In the early 2000s, this station was the subject of major works consisting of creating a new access leading directly to the connecting corridor, the installation of three elevators (one for each platform) and the renovation of the historic passenger building. . This station is now fully accessible to people with reduced mobility.
After the separation the central platform in two, there is an electrical substation and, remembering the Sceaux line before the RER, a metro logo carved out of hedges. In addition, another particularity of this station, the service plans were the first of the new generation to be installed on the RER A/B network.
In 2020 a new forecourt and new bus station are built
In 2016, according to RATP estimates, annual ridership was 4,462,976 travelers
Bus connections
The station is served by:
Gallery
- South of the station under snow
- The station probably in 1907
- Platform 2 to the North in early morning
- the "new entrance" built in 2000
- Sight of vue of the station with the old schema of the street
- From Platform 1Bis to the North
See also
References
- ↑ "Plan pour les voyageurs en fauteuil roulant" [Map for travelers in wheelchairs] (PDF). Île-de-France Mobilités (in French and British English). 2023. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
- ↑ "Trafic annuel entrant par station du réseau ferré 2019". data.ratp.fr (in French). Retrieved 25 January 2021.
External links
Media related to Gare de Bourg-la-Reine at Wikimedia Commons