Trolleybuses in Lausanne

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Lausanne trolleybus system
An NAW trolleybus and trailer in Lausanne.
Operation
Locale Lausanne, Switzerland
Open 2 October 1932 (1932-10-02)
Status Open
Routes 10
Operator(s) Transports publics de la région lausannoise (TL)
Infrastructure
Electrification 600 V DC
Overview

Website Transports publics de la région lausannoise (TL) (French)

The Lausanne trolleybus system (French: Réseau de trolleybus de Lausanne) forms part of the public transport network of Lausanne, in the canton of Vaud, Switzerland. The system has been in operation since 1932[1] and is the third-oldest surviving trolleybus system in the world, after those of Shanghai and Philadelphia.

Today, the system is the largest in Switzerland; it is supplemented by the Métro Lausanne, and by various conventional bus lines.

The system is operated by Transports publics de la région lausannoise (TL) – formerly Tramways Lausannois – and comprises 10 trolleybus lines, serving not only Lausanne, but also the neighbouring municipalities of Le Mont-sur-Lausanne, Lutry, Paudex, Prilly, Pully and Renens. Following some line closures, the system no longer serves Cugy, Epalinges and Froideville.

History

Opened on 2 October 1932, the Lausanne system was only the second trolleybus system to open in Switzerland, preceded by the rural Fribourg–Farvagny trolleybus system.[1][2] That line closed earlier in 1932. The Lausanne system was therefore the country's only trolleybus system at the time of its opening, and it retained this distinction until the opening of the Winterthur trolleybus system, in 1938.[1]

The Lausanne system's first line was between Lausanne railway station and Ouchy. In 1938–1939, a number of additional lines were opened, and between 1938 and 1964 the system gradually replaced the Lausanne tramway network.

On 9 April 1951, the tram line to Montheron was replaced by a trolleybus line. On 7 January 1964, trolleybus line 7 replaced tram line 9, which had been closed the previous day. By that year, there were 10 trolleybus lines in Lausanne.

On 1 June 1969, a suburban trolleybus line to Le Chalet-à-Gobet was launched. On 3 June 1973, line 5 was extended to Epalinges, and on 1 June 1975, an extension of line 9 was opened to Lutry. On 2 June 1991, an extension was built to Bourdonnette, after which line 2 was discontinued. A day later, line 15 was extended to Coudraie.

Lines

Today, the network has 10 lines:

01 Maladière – St-Francois – Blécherette 23/22 stops rigid + trailer or articulated
02 Maladière-Lac – Ouchy – St-Francois – Désert 25 stops rigid + trailer or articulated
03 Lausanne-Gare CFF – Bellevaux 12 stops articulated
04 Pully-Gare CFF – C.-F. Ramuz – St-Francois – Chauderon – Coudraie 20 stops rigid bus
06 Maladière– Chauderon – St-François – Sallaz 19 stops rigid + trailer, articulated or rigid
07 Val-Vert – St-Francois – Renens-14 Avril 24/23 stops rigid + trailer
08 Verrière – St-Francois – Bellevaux – Grand-Mont 32/31 stops articulated
09 Lutry-Corniche – Pully – St-Francois – Prilly-Eglise 25/26 stops rigid + trailer or articulated
21 Lausanne-Gare CFF – Blécherette 14 stops rigid + trailer or articulated
25 Bourdonnette – Maladière – Montchoisi – Pully-Gare 19 stops articulated or rigid

Since December 2009, line 8 has operated via Bellevaux to Grand-Mont, but the TL began the 3.3 km (2.1 mi) long extension of the overhead wire only in early 2011. Until completion of the extension in December 2011, every second service on this line was operated by articulated conventional buses - the extension was initially operated only every 20 minutes.

Some of the catenary masts used in constructing the extension of line 8 were recycled masts from the former interurban line 20 to Montheron. This line was powered by electricity until 1993; the catenary was dismantled in 1998.[3]

Fleet

Retired fleet and heritage vehicles

Upon its opening in 1932, the Lausanne system had just three trolleybuses, manufactured by FBW / SWS and fitted with electrical equipment by BBC. Two of these trolleybuses were rebuilt in 1964, and one of the rebuilt vehicles remains in existence to this day. In the second half of the 1930s, a further 32 trolleybuses were added to the fleet. Also manufactured by FBW, they were 9.35 m (30.7 ft) in length, had 22 seats and 31 standing places, and remained in service until 1976.

As of the end of 1964, the system had a large fleet of trolleybuses and 20 passenger carrying trailers. In 1975, 18 new trolleybuses arrived in Lausanne. Between 1982 and 1989, a total of 72 new trolleybuses were purchased. In 2001–2002, 28 Neoplan articulated trolleybuses were added to the fleet, replacing 29 rigid 12 m long vehicles built between 1964 and 1969. The Neoplan trolleybuses were eventually sold in 2010.

Fleet nos. Quantity Manufacturer Electrics Type Model Low-floor Built
001–3 03 FBW / SWS BBC   rigid no 1932
004–35 32 FBW / Eggli BBC   rigid no 1938–1939
041–48 08 FBW / Eggli BBC 51 rigid no 1951
651–675 25 FBW / Eggli BBC 71 rigid no 1963–1964
676–679 04 FBW / Eggli BBC 91 rigid no 1969
701–718 18 FBW / Hess SAAS 91 rigid no 1975–1976
723–731,
734–738
14 FBW / Hess BBC-Sécheron 91 rigid no 1981–1984
800–827 28 Neoplan Kiepe N 6121 articulated,
dual-mode bus
yes 2001–2002
931–950 20 Moser / Eggli none   trailer yes 1963–1964
981 01 Hess / Lanz + Marti none   trailer (prototype) yes 1986

Trailer no. 981 was retired in 2010,[4] and has since been owned by the RétroBus Léman preservation society. It was the first low-floor trolleybus vehicle in Switzerland. Trolleybus no. 2, dating back to the opening of the Lausanne system in 1932, has also been preserved and is now the oldest trolleybus in continental Europe.

During the 2000s, the TL also sold some withdrawn trolleybuses, including the Neoplans, to a Romanian used-bus dealer, who in turn sold them to the trolleybus operators in Sibiu and Ploiești.

Current fleet

As of 2012, the TL trolleybus fleet consisted of 58 rigid (two-axle) and 35 articulated vehicles. There are also 53 trailers available for attachment to the rigid trolleybuses, the Lausanne trolleybus system being one of only two trolleybus systems worldwide that still utilise this form of operation (the other one is the Lucerne system).

In addition, the Lausanne system is, along with the La Chaux-de-Fonds and Lucerne systems, one of only three trolleybus systems in Switzerland still using rigid vehicles. In the medium term, however, the rigid trolleybus-trailer combinations will be replaced by bi-articulated buses.

Fleet no. range Quantity Manufacturer Electrics Type Model Low-floor Built
721–722,
732–733,
739–750
16 FBW / Hess BBC-Sécheron 91 rigid no 1981–1984
751–792 42 NAW / Lauber BBC-Sécheron   rigid no 1986–1990
831–865 35 Hess Kiepe BGT-N2C articulated yes 2009–2010
901–920 30 Hess / Lanz + Marti none ? trailer yes 1990[2]
921–930 30 Hess / Lanz + Marti none ? trailer yes 2006[5]
951–973 17 or fewer
remaining
Rochat / Lauber none ? trailer no 1974–1979

The 1970s-built trailers are the oldest trolleybus vehicles in regular service in Switzerland.[citation needed] Six of these, nos. 953–957 and 971 had been withdrawn from service by April 2010.[4]

Depots

The Lausanne trolleybus fleet is stored in the La Borde and Perrelet depots.

See also

References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Murray, Alan (2000). World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia, p. 73. Yateley, Hampshire, UK: Trolleybooks. ISBN 0-904235-18-1.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Dölling, Gerhard (1993). Straßenbahnatlas Schweiz 1993, pp. 60, 112–114. Berlin: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Blickpunkt Straßenbahn e.V. ISBN 3-926524-13-8.
  3. "Verlängerung der Trolleybuslinie 8" [Extension of trolleybus line 8] (in German). TrolleyMotion. Retrieved 7 January 2012. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Trolleybus Magazine No. 293 (September–October 2010), p. 115. National Trolleybus Association (UK). ISSN 0266-7452.
  5. Trolleybus Magazine No. 273 (May–June 2007), p. 67. National Trolleybus Association (UK). ISSN 0266-7452.

Books

  • Schwandl, Robert (2010). Schwandl's Tram Atlas Schweiz & Österreich. Berlin: Robert Schwandl Verlag. ISBN 978 3 936573 27 5.  (German) (English)

External links

Media related to Trolleybuses in Lausanne at Wikimedia Commons

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