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Lyria logo
'TGV Lyria' is service brand used for
TGV lines connecting
France and
Switzerland. 'Lyria' is also a
corporation that runs the service.
Corporate status
Initially, the corporation was a "groupement d'intérêt économique" (literally, group of (shared) economic interest) between
SNCF and
SBB-CFF-FFS whose goal was the creation of TGV service between
Gare de Lyon (Paris) and
Lausanne/
Bern. Today, the corporation is officially a "société par actions simplifiée" (
limited company) by French law. SNCF owns 74% of the capital and CFF owns the remaining 26%.
History
Since the summer of 1961, the route between Paris and Lausanne was operated by the
Trans Europ Express ''Cisalpin'' trains, which continued on to
Milan. On
January 22,
1984, this service was replaced by a new TGV service with tri-current locomotives, though service was cut back to Lausanne. In the spirit of the previous European expresses, the trains were christened with names: ''Champs-Elysées'', ''Lemano'', ''Lutetia'', and ''Cisalpin''. On
May 31,
1987, the train service was rebranded as ''EuroCity''; by this time, service to Bern was in place as well. The GIE was actually created for the first time on
May 23,
1993 to operate the segments between Paris and Lausanne/Bern. Service to
Geneva was not covered at that time. During the winter of
1995-
1996, a single roundtrip per day was extended from Lausanne to
Brigue to stop at stations serving
ski resorts in the
Rhône valley. As was the case with other trains with similar service, these trains were branded as ''
TGV des Neiges''. On
September 28,
1997, the service was a bit reorganized and rebranded as ''Ligne de Cœur'', with new livery applied to the trainset. On
March 4,
2002, the 'Lyria' name was applied for the first time to the service. The name then slowly came to stand for all TGV services between France and Switzerland and was applied to Paris-Geneva trains around January 2005 (service to Geneva had existed as part of
LGV Sud-Est since 1981).
After the opening of the
TGV Est in June 2007, Lyria service between Paris and Zurich used the newly-constructed line instead of the current route, passing through
Strasbourg,
Colmar ,
Mulhouse, and
Basel. Consequently, service from Paris runs from the
Gare de l'Est instead of
Gare de Lyon. The service uses new trainsets, the
TGV POS.
Current service
As of 10 June 2007, the following routes run:
★ Geneva-Paris – up to 7 roundtrips per day; travel time 3 hours 30 minutes
★ Lausanne-Dijon-Paris – 4 roundtrips per day; travel time 3 hours 45 minutes. Summer Saturdays runs through to Brig (6h)
★ Bern-Dijon-Paris – 2 roundtrips per day, 1 on Saturdays; travel time 4 hrs 45 min
★ Basel - Strasbourg - Paris (Gare de l'Est) - 4 round trips per day 3h 30 (twice per day runs through to Zurich, 4h30)
At the end of 2005, Lyria transported its 3 millionth passenger.
Future
From 9 December 2007, a Saturday trip will be further extended to
Chur to serve more ski resorts in the
Grisons region. Travel time from Paris is expected to be around 6 hours.
In June 2009, Paris-Geneva travel time improvement will be achieved with the reconstruction of the
Haut-Bugey line, which connects
Bourg-en-Bresse and
Bellegarde-sur-Valserine. Only the western part of the line is currently only open (up to
Oyonnax), and the project will restore the entire length of the line. Travel time between Paris and Geneva will be reduced by 30 minutes and track capacity will be increased, allowing 9 trains each way per day instead of the 7 today.
In 2011-2012, with the completion of the
LGV Rhin-Rhône, travel time between Paris and Basel/Zurich will be reduced by an additional 30 minutes. The departure station in Paris will yet again be moved, this time returning to Gare de Lyon.
Rolling stock
For the route between Paris and Lausanne, Bern, and Zurich, new
TGV Sud-Est tri-current trains is used, with 7 trains owned by SNCF and 2 owned by CFF (train nos. 112 & 114). Since summer 2006, 5 trains (nos. 110, 111, 113, 114, and 118) were renovated to offer a better quality of service. The maxium speed is attained on the
LGV Sud-Est between
Aisy-sous-Thil (west of Dijon) and
Valenton (near Paris). Service to Geneva is operated using "classic" TGV Sud-Est equipment; that is, bi-current sets relieved by
TGV Duplex. Trains, with the exception of those running to Geneva, used to carry the ''Ligne de cœur'' logo; this has been slowly replaced in 2006 with the ''TGV Lyria'' logo and only the old red-border livery remains. The CFF logo was also added to their cars during April 2006.
After the opening of the LGV Est in 2007, service to Basel/Zurich will be run by the new TGV POS as well as renovated
TGV Réseau trains.
See also
Other TGV services that operate beyond French borders:
★
Eurostar
★
Thalys
★
Elipsos
★
Artésia
External links
★
TGV Lyria – Official website