Lausanne Métro

Lausanne Métro
Pink circle with three diagonal white lozenges forming stylised letter 'm'
Line M2 near Grancy station
Line M2 near Grancy station
Overview
Native nameMétro de Lausanne (in French)
LocaleLausanne, Vaud, Switzerland
Transit typeLight rail (Line M1)
Rapid transit (Line M2)
Number of lines2
Number of stations28
Annual ridership45.4 million (2013)[1]
WebsiteTransports Lausannois (TL) (in French)
Operation
Began operation1991 (Line M1)
2008 (Line M2)
Operator(s)TL
Number of vehicles40
Technical
System lengthM1: 7.8 km (4.8 mi)[2]
M2: 5.9 km (3.7 mi)[3]
Total: 13.7 km (8.5 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrificationyes

The Lausanne Métro (French: Métro de Lausanne) system is a two-line urban rail transport system in Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland. Around a quarter of the system has been used for urban rail transport since 1877, when the route between the city centre and Ouchy opened as Switzerland's first public funicular railway. The network is owned by two distinct companies and operated by a third.

Of the operating lines, only line M2 can be considered a true, grade-separated rapid transit line. It is a fully automated, rubber-tyred metro line based on the technology of the Paris Métro and opened on 27 October 2008.[4] Upon the opening of Line M2, Lausanne replaced Rennes, France, as the smallest city in the world to have a full metro system, a record it detained until the opening of the Brescia Metro in 2013.[5] A third line (Line M3) is now planned, based on the same rubber-tyred metro technology as Line M2.

History

Former Métro Lausanne–Ouchy

The Lausanne-Ouchy railway, the precursor to the M2 Line of the Lausanne Métro, was inaugurated in 1877 as a funicular. In 1959 the first overhaul took place by transforming the funicular into a rack railway under the name "métro". At that time, Flon and Gare CFF stations were demolished and replaced by concrete underground equivalents. The line was however always nicknamed La Ficelle (literal translation: "The String") by its users due to its funicular past and circulation above ground in the greenery for more than half of its run.

Connected to the Flon facilities, the freight trains from the main station to the storage area of the harbour (in Flon) travelled on this line until the construction of a direct connection between the freight station of Sébeillon and the Flon Valley in 1954.

The line was finally closed to all traffic on 21 January 2006. The rolling stock was originally sold to the French city of Villard-de-Lans which planned the construction in 2008 of its own rack railway, La Patache, to ensure a link between the centre of Villard and Le Balcon de Villard.

A bus service was put into operation to replace the then-closed "La Ficelle" until the opening of the new metro M2 Line. This service was called Métrobus (MB): the south loop linked Ouchy to the CFF station and the north loop linked the station to Montbenon (which is located right above the Flon area).

Line M2 opened on 27 October 2008.[4] This makes Lausanne the only city in Switzerland to have a full metro system; Zürich once proposed a U-Bahn system in the 1960s and 1970s, which failed in the face of massive political and public opposition, though Zürich does have sections of its S-Bahn network that see frequencies comparable to metro services. Line M1, however, is considered light rail albeit being underground for a short section in the city centre.

Current service

Line M1

The Line M1 is a 7.8-kilometre (4.8 mi) long light rail metro line which links Lausanne-Flon, in the centre of Lausanne, to Renens, to the west of the agglomeration. The line serves an important purpose as it goes through the Lausanne campus, making it a crucial transport method for students accessing their university.

Line M2

Line M2
Overview
LocaleVaud, Switzerland
Termini
Stations14
Service
TypeMetro
SystemLausanne Metro
Operator(s)TL
Rolling stock18 2-car MP 89 TL trains
Daily ridership75,615 (average, 2013)
Ridership31.5 million (2018)[6]
28 million (2014)[7]
27.6 million (2013)[3]
History
Opened2008
Technical
Line length5.9 km (3.7 mi)[3]
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
with running pads for the rubber
tired wheels outside of the steel rails
Route map

km
Station
5.9
Croisettes
5.5
Vennes
Garage
4.9
Fourmi
4.2
Sallaz
3.4
CHUV
2.8
Ours
2.3
Bessières
1.9
Riponne–Maurice Béjart
1.5
Lausanne-Flon
1.2
Lausanne-Gare
0.9
Grancy
Montriond
0.6
Délices
0.3
Jordils
0.0
Ouchy–Olympique
The M2 under construction on the stretch of the former Metró-Ouchy

The Lausanne Métro Line M2 is 5.9-kilometre (3.7 mi) long [citation needed] and uses the alignment of the former Lausanne-Ouchy railway, plus a new route towards Epalinges, crossing the whole city of Lausanne from north to south. Construction work (including enabling works) took around 4 years,[8] and brought significant rebuilds of all former Métro Lausanne-Ouchy stations, plus involved moving the platforms at Lausanne-Flon station a short distance further north[4] to give Cross-platform interchange from northbound M2 to the Lausanne-Echallens-Bercher railway. The new line opened in autumn 2008.[8]

Technical

The line is not entirely underground, but the majority (70-90%) of the system is in tunnel.[4][5] The line is steeply sloped, with an average incline of 5.7% and as steep as 12% in some places.[9] A rubber-tyred metro was selected to counter these, the steepest slopes of any similar adhesion-worked system in the world.[4] The constraints in braking distance and deceleration are such that the M2 can travel faster upwards than downwards.[citation needed]

The M2 Lausanne Gare station showing one of the steeply graded platforms.

The regular passenger route is 6.5 kilometres (4.0 mi)[9] in length from Ouchy to Epalinges, including 1.5 km (0.93 mi) of line that replaces the former Lausanne-Ouchy railway. There are 14 stations on the line, which makes a 338 m (1,109 ft) vertical gain.[9] An additional 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) of track is contained within the depot at Vennes, along with the signalling, security and information facilities.[4]

The line is entirely automated, managed from a central command station. This means that it is cheaper to operate[4] than a traditional system with drivers, and more flexible[dubiousdiscuss] during peak hours. The stations are equipped with platform screen doors and dedicated station personnel are on hand to assist passengers. In contrast with line 1, trains also run on a totally separate right-of-way, meaning there is no conflict between the surface traffic and the metro, enhancing safety and reliability compared to a tramway. All new sections of the route were built as double track, plus the reused Lausanne-Ouchy alignment was also rebuilt as double-track, with the exception of the tunnel under the CFF station due to high costs. This leads to increased capacity and less potential for knock-on delays.

Performance

The line opened in 2008 with a designed capacity of 25 million passengers/year, but exceeded this with 27.6 million by 2013,[3] and 28 million in 2014.[7] As of February 2015, overcrowding is now a significant problem, and the state has granted significant funds towards a programme which will improve capacity by running extra trains and building additional tracks.[7] Patronage has continued to rise, with 31.5 million passengers carried in 2018.[6]

Trains travel up to every 3 minutes[9] between the main railway station and Sallaz, with trains every 6 minutes along the rest of the line. The trains travel with a top service speed of 60 km/h (37 mph) top speed,[9] taking 18 minutes to travel the full length of the line. The line was designed for up to 6,600 passengers/hour in each direction.[citation needed]

Stations

Ouchy M2 station, showing a train stabled on a closed platform 'not in use' and another train approaching in the distance. As this station is the end of line, the track end, is also visible.
Route of the M2

The underground stations are located as close as possible to the surface. They are equipped with stairs, lifts and facilities for handicapped people. The Lausanne slopes have been used to create multi-level access, make ramp access easier[4] and take advantage of natural light as much as possible. At Lausanne-Flon, there are connections to Métro Line M1 and the R20 service of leb. At Lausanne railway station, the line connects to regional train services of RER Vaud and long-distance trains of Swiss Federal Railways (CFF) and TGV Lyria.

Station Altitude New/existing Situation Stopping time Connections
Ouchy-Olympique[10] 373 m (1,224 ft) existing Outdoors 70 sec
Jordils 392 m (1,286 ft) existing Outdoors 25 sec
Délices 408 m (1,339 ft) new Indoors 25 sec
Montriond 420 m (1,378 ft) deleted Outdoors -
Grancy 425 m (1,394 ft) new Outdoors 25 sec
Lausanne railway station 451 m (1,480 ft) existing Underground 35 sec R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R9
Lausanne-Flon 473 m (1,552 ft) existing Underground 35 sec
Riponne - Maurice Béjart 492 m (1,614 ft) new Underground 35 sec
Bessières 500 m (1,640 ft) new Underground 25 sec
Ours 517 m (1,696 ft) new Underground 35 sec
CHUV 570 m (1,870 ft) new Underground 35 sec
Sallaz 610 m (2,001 ft) new Indoors 35 sec
Fourmi 651 m (2,136 ft) new Underground 25 sec
Vennes 683 m (2,241 ft) new Underground 25 sec
Croisettes 711 m (2,333 ft) new Underground 70 sec

Rolling stock

Mockup of a bogie of a M2 train
Technical data of the trains
  • Length of a train : 30,680 mm (100 ft 7+78 in)
  • Length of a car : 15,340 mm (50 ft 3+1516 in)
  • Width of a car : 2,450 mm (8 ft 716 in)
  • Height of the car to ground level: 3,470 mm (11 ft 4+58 in)
  • Mass of an empty train : 57,316 kg (126,360 lb)
  • Mass of a train at maximum load (4 p/m2) : 72,856 kg (160,620 lb) (1)
  • Width of the access doors : 1,650 mm (5 ft 4+1516 in)
  • Height of the access doors : 1,900 mm (6 ft 2+1316 in)

(1) Calculated with an average of 70 kg (154 lb) per passenger.

Capacity of the trains
Number of passengers/m2 Passengers per train
Nominal load 4 pax/m2 222[4]
Full load 6 pax/m2 314
Maximum load 8 pax/m2 406
Delivery of the trains

The first train was delivered to Lausanne on 2 March 2006[8] and all the other trains were delivered at a rate of two per month. When they arrived, the trains were stored in the CFF storage of Lausanne. Once the métro's depot had been completed, the vehicles were moved to the Vennes facility by the Autumn of 2006.

With the line having been over its design capacity for at least 2 years,[3][7] the state granted funds for 3 additional metro trainsets in February 2015. The vehicles are being built in Valenciennes by Alstom, who also built the original fleet, and are designed to be identical to the existing rolling stock.[12] The new vehicles, which are due to arrive in Lausanne by mid-2017,[12] are an interim solution to raise capacity on the central section of the line. Capacity between Lausanne-gare and Sallaz[7] stations will rise from 5,600 passengers per hour (each way) to 7,000 passengers per hour (each way) when they enter service in the last 3 months[12] of 2017. The longer-term plan, for which funding is now also in place, involves a new double-track tunnel under the railway station.[7]

Accidents

On 23 February 2005, part of the tunnel under construction collapsed under the Saint-Laurent square in the centre of Lausanne. More than 500 m3 of debris (water and earth) fell into the tunnel, forming a huge fifteen metre gap. The area was completely evacuated for a few days and consolidation and geological analysis work started. A large pocket of water had not been noticed during the initial explorations.

Repair work lasted for a few months. The incident fortunately had no major consequence; nobody was in the area of the collapse which had heavily damaged a shopping mall. Part of the budget had been allocated for such risks and the deadline for the construction in December 2008 was not directly affected.

On 27 October 2006, a construction worker died from injuries. He had fallen a few days before on the construction site at the level of the entrance of the University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV).

On 28 July 2008, a high-level manager for Alstom who had responsibility for the security system for the new lines was found hanging in the stairwell at the entrance to the Vennes station of the M2. The 45-year-old French man's death appeared to have been a suicide.[13]

Extensions and development

New Lausanne-Gare section

The state has granted funds for major development of the Métro system, with plans in place for improvement work until 2025. Development on the m2 line will also provide for the future of a line 3. Capacity improvement is currently limited to the central and northern sections of the line, because the tunnel under the main railway station is only single-track. Funding is now in place to build a new double-track tunnel under the railway station, and relocate the métro station closer to the main-line platforms. This will mean extra capacity is available on the whole line, and will leave the original tunnel and 2006 station available for the planned line 3.[7] As of October 2019, a further public scrutiny project is underway, and work to build the new tunnel and platforms is due to start in 2022, with the new route expected to be operational in 2027.[14]

Northward extension

The end station Les Croisettes has been designed to allow a future extension of the line to the north[4] towards Epalinges-Village, or even Le Chalet-à-Gobet.

Future service

Line M3

A Line M3 is proposed to serve the new development area of La Blécherette[15] and the west of Lausanne (Malley, Renens Bussigny). Line M3 is planned to use metro technology compatible with the M2 and would be in correspondence with M1, M2 and LEB railway at the station Lausanne-Flon. The press theorised that the M3 could take over the M2 line from Ouchy to Lausanne Gare and a new terminus for the M2 would be established.[16] However, this issue has subsequently been clarified: while new platforms will be built at Lausanne Gare, a second tunnel will be constructed from there to Grancy, underneath the main railway station. Under these proposals, both lines 2 and 3 will share the physical track onwards to Ouchy. This additional tunnel would bring the immediate benefit of allowing more frequent métro services to the railway station.[17] The proposals were put to a referendum in February 2014, and having won public approval in the vote, work on the new line was projected to start in 2018,[18] and a managerial position for the project has been advertised.[19]

In 2014, it was reported that the first stage of construction would be between Lausanne-Chauderon station, Lausanne-Gare and Ouchy, as a total of 47 million francs have been given to the project by the Federal Council. It is expected the second phase of work, between Chauderon and La Blécherette, will cost a further 72 million francs.[17] Public inquiries into the first construction project have now opened,[14] covering the initial stretch to reroute line 2 between Grancy and the current Lausanne-Gare platforms.

Network map

Schematic network map

Map


See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ https://rapportannuel.t-l.ch/
  2. ^ "Lausanne-Flon – Renens-Gare".
  3. ^ a b c d e "Chiffres clé 2013" [Key figures 2013] (in French). Transports publics de la région lausannoise (TL). 2013. Archived from the original on 13 May 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Lausanne Metro m2, Switzerland". Railway-Technology.com. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  5. ^ a b "Lausanne Subway Prepares to Handle Passengers". Railway Technology. 28 August 2008. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  6. ^ a b Axes Forts - Développement des métros automatiques m2-m3 (PDF) (in French), Agglomération Lausanne-Morges, May 2019, p. 10, retrieved 21 November 2019
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Des métros au coeur des transports publics du canton : un plan de développement des m2 et m3" (in French). Canton of Vaud.
  8. ^ a b c "Chronologie - Site officiel de la Ville de Lausanne" [Timeline - Official site of the City of Lausanne] (in French). Archived from the original on 16 July 2014. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  9. ^ a b c d e "Un réseau performant - Site officiel de la Ville de Lausanne" [A performing network - Official site of the City of Lausanne] (in French). Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  10. ^ In 2015, the metro station "Ouchy" was renamed "Ouchy-olympique" to mark the 100th anniversary of the installation of the International Olympic Committee in Lausanne.
  11. ^ Lambert, Anthony (2013). Switzerland without a Car (5 ed.). Bradt Travel Guides. p. 258. ISBN 978-1841624471.
  12. ^ a b c "Alstom to deliver three additional metros for Lausanne Line M2 by 2017". Railway Technology. 6 May 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  13. ^ "[Dead link]" (in French). Archived from the original on 27 September 2011.
  14. ^ a b Emmanuelle Birraux (24 October 2019). "Lausanne:Le premier tronçon du métro m3 mis à l'enquête" (in French). 24 heures. Archived from the original on 25 October 2019. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  15. ^ "[Dead link]" (PDF) (in French). 17 January 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 April 2008.
  16. ^ "Le M3, qui passera ici ou par là, cherche encore sa voie" (PDF). 24 heures. 10–11 September 2011. p. 15. Retrieved 21 May 2014.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ a b "Le Conseil fédéral mettra 47 millions dans le M3 lausannois". 24 heures. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  18. ^ "M3: l'apport de la Confédération réjouit". 20 minutes. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  19. ^ "Jobsforbrains Profil" (in French). 20 April 2017.

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Overview of the national symbols of Belarus This article uses bare URLs, which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot. Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style. Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting, such as reFill (documentation) and Citation bot (documentation). (August 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Upon the independence of Belarus from t...

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The Priory, Balham in 1876 The Priory in 2018 The Priory, 225 Bedford Hill, Balham, London is a grade II listed building, and the scene in 1876 of the death by poisoning of the lawyer Charles Bravo. The Priory is a double fronted Gothic Revival style villa built in 1812.[1][2] It has been a grade II listed building since 1970.[1] After Charles Bravo's death, according to the Financial Times, it was the most famous home in London.[3] It was converted into flats ...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!