Lyon Metro Line D
| Line D | |
|---|---|
| File:Lyon tcl metro-d.svg | |
| File:Métro D (Lyon, 2025).jpg | |
| Overview | |
| Native name | Ligne D |
| Termini | |
| Connecting lines | Lyon Metro Lyon Metro Line A Lyon Metro Line D Funiculars of Lyon Funiculars of Lyon Funiculars of Lyon Lyon tramway Lyon tramway#Line T1 Lyon tramway#Line T2 Lyon tramway#Line T4 Lyon tramway#Line T5 Lyon tramway#Line T6 |
| Stations | 15[1] |
| Service | |
| Type | Rapid transit |
| System | Lyon Metro |
| Operator(s) | TCL |
| Rolling stock | MPL 85 |
| Ridership | Annual: 84,201,000 (2019)[2] |
| History | |
| Opened | 9 September 1991[1] |
| Last extension | 28 April 1997[1] |
| Technical | |
| Line length | 12.5 km (7.8 mi)[1] |
| Character | Driverless (MAGGALY) |
| Rack system | None |
| Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge with rollways outside of track |
| Electrification | 750 V DC third rail (guide bars) |
| Average inter-station distance | 929 m (3,048 ft) |
| Public transport in Lyon |
|---|
| Networks |
| Main railway stations |
| Other railway stations |
| Airports |
Line D (Ligne D) is a rapid-transit line on the Lyon Metro. It runs east–west underneath the two major rivers of Lyon, France, connecting Vieux Lyon with the Presqu'ile and the Part-Dieu region. Line D commenced operation under human control on 4 September 1991, between Gorge de Loup and Grange Blanche.[1] It was extended from Grange Blanche to Gare de Vénissieux on 11 December 1992, when it switched to automatic (driverless) operation, also known as MAGGALY (Métro Automatique à Grand Gabarit de l’Agglomération Lyonnaise).[1] On 28 April 1997, the line was extended from Gorge de Loup to Gare de Vaise.[1]
Being the deepest of the lines in Lyon, it was constructed mainly using boring machines and passes under both rivers, the Rhône and the Saône. At 12.5 kilometres (7.8 mi) long[1] and serving 15 stations,[1] it is also the longest metro line in Lyon.
List of the stations
[edit | edit source]- Gare de Vaise Lyon-Vaise station
- Valmy
- Gorge de Loup Lyon-Gorge-de-Loup station (Western Lyon tram-train)
- Vieux Lyon–Cathédrale Saint-Jean Funiculars of Lyon Funiculars of Lyon Funiculars of Lyon
- Bellecour Lyon Metro Lyon Metro Line A
- Guillotière–Gabriel Péri Lyon tramway Lyon tramway#Line T1
- Saxe–Gambetta Lyon Metro Lyon Metro Line B
- Garibaldi
- Sans Souci
- Monplaisir–Lumière
- Grange Blanche Lyon tramway Lyon tramway#Line T2 Lyon tramway#Line T5
- Laënnec
- Mermoz–Pinel Lyon tramway Lyon tramway#Line T6
- Parilly
- Gare de Vénissieux Lyon tramway Lyon tramway#Line T4 Vénissieux station
Chronology
[edit | edit source]- 9 September 1991: Opening of line D from Gorge de Loup to Grange Blanche
- 11 December 1992: Extension from Grange Blanche to Gare de Vénissieux
- 28 April 1997: Extension from Gorge de Loup to Gare de Vaise
Rolling stock
[edit | edit source]Since the opening of the line in 1991, there are 36 MPL 85 trains. The MPL 85 are composed of 2 cars per trainset.
From 2020, only during peak hours, each train could combine two MPL 85 trainsets and form a single train of 4 cars.[citation needed]
In 2016, new MPL 16 trains have been ordered to Alstom. 18 of them will circulate on the line starting from 2027, in addition to MPL 85 trains. The 2 cars of each train will be connected with gangways, which is a novelty in Lyon Metro rolling stock.[citation needed]
The MPL 16 trains won't be able to run on the line D with the current driverless system, MAGGALY. To overcome this problem, the line D will get a new driverless system, the same as the one equipping line B since 2022, where MPL 16 circulate too.[citation needed]
References
[edit | edit source]External links
[edit | edit source]Lua error in Module:Authority_control at line 153: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- 1991 establishments in France
- 2nd arrondissement of Lyon
- 3rd arrondissement of Lyon
- 5th arrondissement of Lyon
- 7th arrondissement of Lyon
- 8th arrondissement of Lyon
- 9th arrondissement of Lyon
- Lyon Metro
- People mover systems in France
- Railway lines opened in 1991
- Rubber-tyred metros
- France rail transport stubs
- French rapid transit stubs