Paris Métro Line 1

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line 1
Year opened 1900
Last extension 1992
Rolling stock MP 89
Stations served 25
Length 16.6 km
Length 10.3 mi
Average interstation 692 m
Journeys made 161,600,000 (per annum)
Paris public transport
Métro lines
line 1 line 7bis
line 2 line 8
line 3 line 9
line 3bis line 10
line 4 line 11
line 5 line 12
line 6 line 13
line 7 line 14
RER lines
line A line D
line B line E
line C
Suburban rail (Transilien)
Saint-Lazare Nord
La Défense Est
Montparnasse Lyon
Airport shuttles
CDGVAL Orlyval
Bus
Bus (RATP) Noctilien
  Bus (Optile)  
Tramway
Tramway T1 Tramway T2
Tramway T3 Tramway T4
A line 1 train near pont de Neuilly
Enlarge
A line 1 train near pont de Neuilly

Paris Métro Line 1 was the first metro line opened in Paris, France, in 1900. The line crosses through the center of Paris east-west and is the busiest metro line with 161 million journeys per year. The line is 16.6 km long and currently links La Défense to the Castle of Vincennes.

Contents

[edit] Chronology

  • July 19, 1900 : Inauguration of line 1 between Porte de Vincennes and Porte Maillot. Only 8 of the 18 planned stations were opened.
  • August 6 and September 1, 1900 : The other 10 stations of the line opened.
  • March 24, 1934 : The line was extended to the east from Porte de Vincennes to the castle of Vincennes.
  • November 15, 1936 : Porte Maillot station was rebuilt in order to allow a further extension of the line to the west.
  • April 29, 1937 : The line was extended to the west from Porte Maillot to Pont de Neuilly.
  • 1963 : The rails were converted in order to accommodate rubber-tyred trains. At the same time, stations were enlarged in order to accommodate 6-car trains instead of 5-car trains.
  • April 1, 1992 : The line was extended again to the west from Pont de Neuilly to La Défense business district.

[edit] Future

It is planned to convert the line to a fully automated system (similar to the Line 14) by the end of 2010. It will be the first heavy duty line to be converted without interrupting traffic, and with both automatic (MP 05) and manual (MP 89 CC) rolling stock running simultaneously till enough automatic rolling stock is available, thanks to the SAET system.

An extension of Line 1 from La Défense station to the center of Nanterre is being considered.

[edit] Stations renamed

  • May 27, 1920 : Alma station renamed George V.
  • May 5, 1931 : Reuilly station renamed Reuilly-Diderot.
  • May 20, 1931 : Champs-Élysées renamed Champs-Élysées - Clémenceau.
  • April 26, 1937 : Tourelle renamed Saint-Mandé - Tourelle.
  • October 6, 1942 : Marbeuf renamed Marbeuf - Rond-Point des Champs-Élysées
  • October 30, 1946 : Marbeuf - Rond-Point des Champs-Élysées renamed Franklin D. Roosevelt.
  • May 25, 1948 : Obligado renamed Argentine.
  • 1970 : Étoile renamed Charles-de-Gaulle - Étoile.
  • 1989 : Palais Royal renamed Palais-Royal - Musée du Louvre after the entrance to the museum was moved with the building of the Louvre Pyramid. At the same time, Louvre station renamed Louvre - Rivoli.
  • 1997 : Grande Arche de la Défense station renamed La Défense.
  • July 26, 2002 : Saint-Mandé - Tourelle renamed Saint-Mandé.

[edit] Facts

Because of less advanced building techniques of the 1900s, line 1 of the Paris metro is the closest line to the surface; many stations have a steel beam structure comprising of both arched and beam section maintaining the large station roof. The line was constructed using the "cut and cover" method and, as a result, follows the line of the streets above. This was done to both facilitate construction and avoid the adjacent buildings' cellars. Bastille station is located above the tunnel entrance of the Canal Saint-Martin, just below the pavement of the Place de la Bastille because in 1900, there was no way to build underwater.

Unlike older trains on other lines, the cars of line 1 trains are all interconnected, allowing people to move between cars. This reduces the number of seats per car and increases standing room.

Despite being almost entirely underground (except Bastille station and for the Seine-crossing at Pont de Neuilly), line 1 is fully covered by mobile phone networks.

[edit] Map

Geographically accurate path of Paris metro line 1.
Enlarge
Geographically accurate path of Paris metro line 1.

[edit] Tourism

Metro line 1 passes near several places of interest

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


Paris Métro Line 1

La Défense — Grande Arche ⇒ A · Esplanade de la Défense · Pont de Neuilly · Les Sablons · Porte Maillot ⇒ C · Argentine · Charles de Gaulle — Étoile  2 6 A · George V · Franklin D. Roosevelt  9 · Champs-Élysées — Clemenceau  13 · Concorde  8 12 · Tuileries · Palais Royal — Musée du Louvre  7 · Louvre — Rivoli · Châtelet  4 7 11 14 A B D · Hôtel de Ville  11 · Saint-Paul · Bastille  5 8 · Gare de Lyon  14 A D · Reuilly — Diderot  8 · Nation  2 6 9 A · Porte de Vincennes · Saint-Mandé · Bérault · Château de Vincennes