|}
The 'LGV Sud-Est' is a
French high-speed passenger rail line, which links
Paris and
Lyon. The inauguration of the first section between
Saint-Florentin (
Yonne) and
Sathonay (
Rhône) on
22 September,
1981 marked the beginning of the re-invigoration of French passenger rail service.
This line, subsequently extended southwards by the
LGV Rhône-Alpes and
LGV Méditerranée and northwards by the
LGV Interconnexion Est, has led to the speeding up of journey times:
★ between Paris and the southeast quarter of France (and by extension towards Switzerland and Italy)
★ between the southeast and the north and west of France (and by extension towards
Britain and
Belgium)
Route
The line crosses six ''départements'', from north to south:
★
Seine-et-Marne
★
Yonne
★
Côte-d'Or
★
Saône-et-Loire
★
Ain
★
Rhône
The TGV system's compatibility with the regular rail network avoided the need for new infrastructure construction in the dense urban areas of Paris and Lyon.
The distance from Paris (
Gare de Lyon) to Lyon (
Part-Dieu) is 425 km. The LGV route is 409 km long; by avoiding built-up areas between Paris and Lyon (particularly
Dijon) this enables a route 87 km shorter than the regular line (512 km). There are no tunnels.
The line includes various connectors to the regular rail network:
★ at Pasilly-Aisy towards Dijon, and further through the
Jura mountains to
Vallorbe/
Lausanne or
Neuchâtel/
Zürich
★ at Mâcon-Pont-de-Veyle towards
Bourg-en-Bresse and
Savoie
★ at
Saint-Florentin
★ at
Le Creusot TGV station
★ at Mâcon-Loché station
These last three are used by service trains or in order to divert passenger trains if needed.
The line runs next to the A5 autoroute for 60 km and the N79 road for 15 km. For its full length, a 5 m wide area has been reserved for a telecommunication artery.
Line specifics
The line has a surface area of 16 square kilometres (in comparison
Charles de Gaulle International Airport occupies 32 square kilometres), with an average width of 40 m. Platforms are 13 m wide, with a space between track centres of 4.2 m. The line was designed for a nominal speed of 300 km/h, with a minimum radius curve of 4,000 m (although 7 curves were made to a smaller radius, but no less than 3,200 m.)
In total, the line comprises 847 km of track. This is formed by UIC 60 (60.3 kg/m) rails placed in lengths of 288 m, welded in place (with certain segmented sections.) The concrete
sleepers of 2.41 m are formed of two blocks of concrete tied together by a metal strut. There are 1660 sleepers per kilometer.
Traction power is supplied by eight
EDF substations at 25 kV AC, 50 Hz. The
catenary is fed by a "feeder" cable in phase opposition, which is equivalent to a 50 kV supply and reinforces the available power, one trainset being able to draw up to 14 MW.
Signalling draws on high-frequency track circuits, signals being transmitted directly to the driver's console. There are lineside marker boards indicating the limits of each block section, but no signals as such.
Stations
The LGV Sud-Est serves the following stations:
★
Le-Creusot
★
Mâcon-Loché
★
Lyon Part-Dieu
Le-Creusot and Mâcon-Loché are basic-looking stations situated away from built-up areas. They have two side platforms and four tracks, the two central tracks being reserved for through trains, the side tracks serving for stopping trains.
History
★
10 July 1967:
SNCF research management launches project C 03 on high speed, titled "Rail Transport Possibilities through New Infrastructure"
★
26 March 1971: approval of new line project by inter-ministerial committee
★
23 March 1976: declaration of public utility, the decree being signed by
Jacques Chirac, prime minister
★
7 December 1976: works commence at
Écuisses (
Saône-et-Loire)
★
14 June 1979: first rails laid near
Montchanin (
Saône-et-Loire)
★
20 November 1980: track laying ends (
Cluny)
★
22 September 1981: inauguration of first section (Saint-Florentin-Sathonay) to
Montchanin by President of the Republic,
François Mitterrand
★
26 February 1981: trainset no. 16 (
TGV Sud-Est) breaks the world record for rail speed at 380 km/h between Courcelles-Frémois (Côte-d'Or) and Dyé (Yonne) in a gradually descending portion of the line
★
27 September 1981: commercial service begins
★
25 September 1983: service begins on northern section (
Combs-la-Ville -
Saint-Florentin)
★
31 August 1992: derailment at 270 km/h of TGV in Macon-Loché station; several waiting passengers on the platform are slightly injured by flying ballast
★
13 December 1992: service begins on northern section of
LGV Rhône-Alpes (from
Montanay to
Saint-Quentin-Fallavier)
★
26 May 1994: service begins on
LGV Interconnexion Est (connection with
LGV Nord)
★ March
1996: beginning of line renovation works (replacement of ballast and points, works designed to last until 2006)
★
2 June 1996: service begins at the junction with
Villeneuve-Saint-Georges by the
Coubert triangle
See also
★
High-speed rail
★
TGV
External links
★
High-speed rail lines site (in French)