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Zone 1 covered the city of Paris, and zones 2-5 surround it. Zone 4 included Versailles, and zone 5 includes Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports, and Disneyland Paris. Starting 1991, there were 8 zones. On 1 July 2007, zones 7 and 8 were merged into zone 6. On 1 July 2011, zone 6 was itself merged into zone 5.
The RER was not fully conceptualised until the completion of the Schéma directeur d'aménagement et d'urbanisme (roughly: "master plan for urban development") in 1965. The RER network, which initially comprised two lines, was formally inaugurated on 8 December 1977 in a ceremony that was attended by President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing. A ...
Station Branch Zone Served municipalities Connections Ablon C4 C6 & C8 4 AthisCar 3/8; N131 Achères–Grand-Cormier A5 5 Saint-Germain-en-Laye Achères-Ville
The new Ticket Métro-Train-RER costs €2.50 and allows trips on the rail networks in all zones, except for the airports, a much larger coverage area than provided by the ticket t+. Historically, the ticket t+ was the main single trip ticket, and was also available as a pack of 10 (a carnet ) at a price reduced by about 20%.
RER E, which opened on 14 July 1999, was built on a route that would also serve the eastern suburbs of Paris, and an 8 km (5.0 mi) tunnel has been built under central Paris that connects the RER E to La Défense. The extension will continue past La Défense to allow the RER E to take over the branch of the RER A to Poissy.
Two BRT lines: the Trans-Val-de-Marne (TVM, 19.7 km (12.2 mi)) and line 393 (11.7 km (7.3 mi)). The Montmartre funicular. Paris bus route 341 was RATP's first line equipped with 100% electric full-size buses (starting June 2016). [16] By early 2021, there were over 150 full battery electric buses in the fleet with a target of 1,500 by 2025. [17]
This article about a railway station in the Île-de-France région of France is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
It was one of the first stations of the French railway network, and is still in use as a station of Paris' RER line B. The station was built from 1842 and opened on 7 June 1846 as the Gare d'Enfer (or Gare de Paris-d'Enfer), after the nearby Place d'Enfer (now called the Place Denfert-Rochereau), itself named after the Barrière d'Enfer. The ...