Paris Métro Line 14 (French: Ligne 14 du métro de Paris) is one of the sixteen lines on the Paris Métro. It connects Saint-Denis–Pleyel and Aéroport d'Orly on a north-west south-east diagonal via the three major stations of Gare Saint-Lazare, the Châtelet–Les-Halles complex, and Gare de Lyon. The line goes through the centre of Paris, and also serves the communes of Saint-Denis, Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine, Clichy, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, Gentilly, Villejuif, Chevilly-Larue, L'Haÿ-les-Roses, Thiais and Paray-Vieille-Poste.

Line 14
MP 14 automatic rolling stock at Gare de Lyon in the 12th arrondissement
Overview
LocaleParis, Saint-Denis, Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine, Clichy, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, Gentilly, Villejuif, Chevilly-Larue, L'Haÿ-les-Roses, Thiais, Paray-Vieille-Poste
TerminiSaint-Denis–Pleyel
Aéroport d'Orly
Connecting linesParis Métro Paris Métro Line 1 Paris Métro Line 3 Paris Métro Line 4 Paris Métro Line 6 Paris Métro Line 7 Paris Métro Line 8 Paris Métro Line 9 Paris Métro Line 11 Paris Métro Line 12 Paris Métro Line 13
RER RER A RER B RER C RER D RER E
Tramways in Île-de-France Île-de-France tramway Line 3a Île-de-France tramway Line 3b Île-de-France tramway Line 7
Transilien Transilien Line J (Paris-Saint-Lazare) Transilien Line L (Paris-Saint-Lazare) Transilien Line R (Paris-Gare-de-Lyon)
Stations20
Service
SystemParis Métro
Operator(s)RATP
Rolling stockMP 14
(60 trains as of 3 November 2024)
Ridership78m (avg. per year)
6th/14 (2021)
History
Opened15 October 1998; 26 years ago (15 October 1998)
Technical
Line length27.8 km (17.3 mi)
Trip time41 min
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
with roll ways for the rubber
tired wheels outside of the steel rails
Electrification750 V DC guide bars
on either side of the track
Conduction systemAutomatic (SAET)
Average inter-station distance1,388 m (4,554 ft)
Route map

Saint-Denis–Pleyel
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 13Paris Métro Line 15**Paris Métro Line 16*Paris Métro Line 17* RERRER D
Mairie de Saint-Ouen
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 13
Saint-Ouen workshop
Saint-Ouen
RERRER C
Porte de Clichy
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 13 RERRER C Tramways in Île-de-FranceÎle-de-France tramway Line 3b
Pont Cardinet
TransilienTransilien Line L (Paris-Saint-Lazare)
Saint-Lazare
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 3Paris Métro Line 9Paris Métro Line 12Paris Métro Line 13 RERRER E TransilienTransilien Line J (Paris-Saint-Lazare)Transilien Line L (Paris-Saint-Lazare) TER Normandie Gare Saint-Lazare
Madeleine
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 8Paris Métro Line 12
Pyramides
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 7
Châtelet
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 1Paris Métro Line 4Paris Métro Line 7Paris Métro Line 11 RERRER ARER BRER D
Gare de Lyon
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 1 RERRER ARER D TransilienTransilien Line R (Paris-Gare-de-Lyon) TER Bourgogne-Franche-Comté Gare de Lyon
Bercy
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 6
Cour Saint-Émilion
Bibliothèque François Mitterrand
RERRER C Tramways in Île-de-FranceÎle-de-France tramway Line 3a
Olympiades
Maison Blanche
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 7 Tramways in Île-de-FranceÎle-de-France tramway Line 3a
Hôpital Bicêtre
Villejuif–Gustave Roussy (opens January 2025)
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 15*
L'Haÿ-les-Roses
Chevilly-Larue
Thiais–Orly
RERRER C
Aéroport d'Orly
Paris MétroParis Métro Line 18* Tramways in Île-de-FranceÎle-de-France tramway Line 7 Orlyval
Morangis workshop

Handicapped/disabled access All stations are accessible
(*) Under construction     (**) Planned

The first Paris Métro line built from scratch since the 1930s, it has been operated completely automatically since its opening in 1998, and the very positive return of that experiment motivated the retrofitting of Line 1 for full automation. Before the start of its commercial service Line 14 was known as project Météor, an acronym of MÉTro Est-Ouest Rapide.

The line has been used as a showcase for the expertise of the RATP (the operator), Alstom, Systra and Siemens Transportation Systems (constructors of the rolling stock and automated equipment respectively) when they bid internationally to build metro systems.

A northward extension to Mairie de Saint-Ouen opened in December 2020.[1] The line extended further north to Saint-Denis–Pleyel and south to Aéroport d'Orly, as part of the Grand Paris Express project, on 24 June 2024.[2]

Chronology

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  • 15 October 1998: new Line 14 inaugurates between Madeleine and Bibliothèque François Mitterrand.
  • 16 December 2003: northern extension from Madeleine to Saint-Lazare opens.
  • 26 June 2007: first southern extension from Bibliothèque François Mitterrand to Olympiades opens.[3]
  • 3 March 2014: first of eighteen MP 05 trains goes into revenue service.[4]
  • 12 October 2020: first of thirty five MP 14 trains goes into revenue service.[5]
  • 14 December 2020: second northern extension from Saint-Lazare to Mairie de Saint-Ouen opens.
  • 28 January 2021: Porte de Clichy station opens to passengers.
  • 13 April 2023: last of MP 89 and MP 05 trains run on the line, being transferred to line 4.[6]
  • 24 June 2024: third northern extension from Mairie de Saint-Ouen to Saint-Denis–Pleyel opens.[2]
  • 24 June 2024: second southern extension from Olympiades to Aéroport d'Orly opens.[2]

Development

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The Météor Project

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Line 14 – Saint-Lazare station

The original line 14 linked Invalides with Porte de Vanves until 1976, when it was merged into the southern section of the current line 13.

Paris's east–west axis across has long been heavily travelled: Line 1 of the Métro began approaching saturation in the 1940s, necessitating the construction of Line A of the RER in the 1960s and '70s; which became the busiest urban routes in Europe (by 2010 there were more than a million passengers each working day). To improve service, the SACEM (Système d'aide à la conduite, à l'exploitation et à la maintenance --"Assisted driving, control and maintenance system") was installed on the central run of Line A in September 1989. This improved efficiency and reduced the interval between trains to just two minutes, though an improvement ultimately insufficient to absorb the increasing demand. To cater permanently to demand on the busy artery between Auber and Gare de Lyon new rail lines would have to be built.

Two proposals were made by the transport companies: the SNCF suggested a new tunnel between Châtelet and Gare de Lyon for Line D of the RER allowing traffic to circulate from the north and south-east of Île-de-France. More importantly it proposed "Project EOLE" ("Est-Ouest Liaison Express"), the creation of a new standard gauge line, initially from Paris's eastern suburbs to Saint-Lazare, then an extension onwards to the western suburbs.

In 1987, the RATP proposed "project Météor", ("MÉTro-Est-Ouest-Rapide") the creation of a new Métro line, from Porte Maillot on the edge of the 16th arrondissement to the Maison Blanche district in the 13th, an area poorly served by transport despite its large population. The project would fit well with the regeneration of the Tolbiac district on the left bank around the new Bibliothèque Nationale de France, in that arrondissement.

The plans to go to Porte Maillot were eventually abandoned in favour of a terminus at Saint-Lazare, with the later possibility of extending the line to Clichy and assimilating the Asnières branch of Line 13, thus simplifying its complicated operation.

Given the pressing need, the council of Ministers of Michel Rocard's government approved the project in October 1989. However, budgetary constraints forced the reduction of both. In the first stage, EOLE would be but a simple extension of trains from the suburbs to the new underground station at Saint-Lazare and Météor limited to the central Madeleine – Bibliothèque run, thus leaving the main railway station of Saint-Lazare and the heart of the 13th arrondissement unserved.[N 1]

Construction

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A train on line 14, direction Olympiades, at Gare de Lyon.

From November 1989 until the end of 1992 exploratory shafts and galleries were dug; tunnelling proper lasted from July 1993 until early 1995. In September 1993, Sandrine was baptised near la Bastille; a tunnel boring machine eighty metres (260 feet) long and eleven metres (36 feet) wide, it was capable of drilling a tunnel 8.6 metres (28 feet) across. Working twenty-four hours a day, five days a week, she bored twenty-five metres (82 feet) below the water table. The terrain, made mostly of loosely packed limestone and marl was favourable to drilling and the tunnel advanced at a respectable 350 metres (380 yards) a month. The tunnel passes underneath seven Métro lines, the sewers, Clichy-Capucines, and four underground carparks and passes over two RER lines.

Works at the site and the excavation of excavated material from the bassin de l'Arsenal were delayed two weeks by a flood of the Seine, the waterway route having been chosen to minimise heavy traffic in the city. The tunnel reached the future Pyramides station on 17 January 1995, and Madeleine on 15 March; it stopped underneath boulevard Haussmann in August and was brought to the surface through shafts there the same month.[N 2]

At the other end of the line, from Gare de Lyon to Tolbiac the tunnel was excavated directly from the surface. It crossed the Seine upstream from pont de Tolbiac, supported by submerged beams the traditional under fluvial support. The last was implanted on 28 September 1994.

As a cost-saving measure, the section from Gare de Lyon to the Bassin de l'Arsenal was excavated at the same time as the tunnels of Line D of the RER Châtelet–Les Halles. The 816,000 m3 (1,067,000 cu yd) of debris excavated is about twice the volume of the Tour Montparnasse, Paris's largest building; and the 19,000 tonnes (18,700 long tons; 20,900 short tons) of steel needed for re-inforced concrete and structural support is twice the mass of the Eiffel Tower.[7]

Incidents

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Travellers have been largely satisfied with Line 14's speed and service. However, despite its automation it has not been free of accidents. While the platform doors prevent access to the rails, they are susceptible to electric outages which have halted service entirely. On 20 September 2004, two trains stopped entirely in the tunnel after a signalling failure.[8] On 22 December 2006, passengers were trapped for one and a half hours after an electrical failure on the line which arose from a mechanical failure.[9] Technological failures have occurred twice: on 21 March 2007 traffic was interrupted between Gare de Lyon and Bibliothèque François Mitterrand;[10] and again on 21 August 2007 a technical failure stopped service.[11]

Extensions

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A train at the station Châtelet.

Traffic on the line grew quickly: after five years in service, there were 240,000 daily passengers in October 2003.[12] That same year, service was interrupted several times to allow the installation of material for an extension north from Madeleine to Saint-Lazare. This section was opened on 16 December 2003, and the line saw a 30% increase in traffic thereafter; this northern terminus of Line 14 is the most important node on the network after Gare du Nord.

In 2007, the line was extended south to Olympiades, an area of high rise towers in the XIIIe arrondissement poorly served by the Métro.[13] The construction of the extension was relatively simple, as the tunnel was built at the same time as the rest of the line. Initially planned to open in 2006, work was delayed by the collapse of a primary school courtyard during the night of 14–15 October 2006.[14][15] Since then traffic has grown again: at the end of 2007, an average of 450,000 passengers used the line on a working day. Due to its use as a train maintenance area, a new maintenance area was constructed.

A second northern extension to Mairie de Saint-Ouen opened on 14 December 2020, helping desaturate somewhat the section of Line 13 between this station and Saint-Lazare. This extension was originally supposed to open in 2017, but construction was postponed several times during the course of 2016 and 2017, and the COVID-19 pandemic also hampered opening efforts during the course of 2020. The opening of this extension lengthened line 14 from 9 km (5.6 mi) to just shy of 14 km (8.7 mi).[16]

As part of the Grand Paris Express expansion plans, Line 14 was again expanded both north and south. The northern extension from Saint-Lazare has a principal aim of reducing overcrowding on Line 13.[17] The adopted solution crosses the two branches of Line 13 with stations at Porte de Clichy on the Asnières–Gennevilliers branch and Mairie de Saint-Ouen on the Saint-Denis branch. Another station interconnects with the RER C station Saint-Ouen, another one with the Transilien Paris-Saint-Lazare lines at Pont Cardinet, and the last one with the RER D at Saint-Denis–Pleyel. Construction on the extension began in 2014, and it was opened on 14 December 2020, except for Saint-Denis–Pleyel on 24 June 2024.[18]

Line 14 was also extended south-eastwards from Olympiades towards Orly Airport, with 6 intermediate stations. Both future ends of the line were connected with the completion of the digging of the final tunnel of the southern extension on 3 March 2021 and the one of the northern extension on 15 April 2021.[19] The southern extension to Orly, along with the northern extension to Saint-Denis–Pleyel, was opened on 24 June 2024.[20][21][2] A fare of €10.30, almost five times the standard Metro fare, applies for journeys starting or ending at Orly Airport.[22] One station – Villejuif–Gustave Roussy – did not open with the rest of the southern extension in June 2024. It will open on 18 January 2025, and will provide a future connection on the orbital line 15.[23]

In February 2012 the STIF announced that, with the two extensions planned, a brand new class of rolling stock, the MP 14 will replace the current line of MP 89CA (and upcoming MP 05) stock along Line 14 around 2020. This new stock will consist of eight-car train formations, longer than used to date on the Métro, with the MP 89CA and MP 05 stock reassigned to other lines (including the possibility of Lines 4, 6, or 11, should they one day become automated).[24]

Statistics

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The number of passengers grew year-by-year on the line.[25][26]

Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Passengers (millions) 3.5 19.0 25.0 31.8 38.7 40.8 64.1 66.9 77.3 79.7 79.4 79.9 78.5 77.6 77.9 78.9 80.2 83.3 87.4 92.0

Impact

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The experience in automated control and doors has inspired several new projects. In 1998, the RATP began planning to automate several existing lines, despite the heavy cost. Automation work on Line 1 began in 2007, along with the introduction of doors on the platform.[27] The upgrade was finished in 2012.[28] In 2022, Line 4 was upgraded and automated following the successful Line 1 project.

The widespread introduction of platform doors for passenger safety is planned, despite the project's cost. In January 2004, ground level signalling to indicate the doorways was tested on Line 13 at Saint-Lazare station. Several different door models were tested during 2006 and Kaba was chosen to supply them. After testing, platform doors will be rolled out across the network, first in certain stations on Line 13, then on the totality of Line 1 in preparation for its complete automation.[S 1]

Technology

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This new line parallel to Line A took the opportunity to incorporate innovations on the rest of the network: the stations are larger and, at 120 metres (390 ft), longer and thus can accommodate eight carriages. The runs between stations are longer, allowing a rolling speed of close to 40 km/h (25 mph), close to double that of the other Paris metro lines and approaching that of the RER. Lastly, the line is completely automated and runs without any driver, the first large-scale metro line in a capital to do so (although driverless operation had been used on the VAL system in Lille and the MAGGALY technology of Lyon Metro Line D).[N 3]

Some features of Line 14's train control system are run under the OpenVMS operating system. Its control system is noted in the field of software engineering of critical systems because safety properties on some safety-critical parts of the systems were proved using the B-Method, a formal method.

Line 14 has some unusual design features – unlike other stations in Paris, its floor tiling is not bitumenised, and platform screen doors at stations prevent passengers from falling onto the track or from committing suicide.

Signaling system

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Météor as CBTC (Communication-based train control) system was supplied by Siemens Transportation Systems including monitoring from an operations control centre, equipment for 7 stations and equipment for 19 six-car trains, resulting in a headway of 85 seconds.[29] It was the base for the Trainguard MT CBTC, which then equipped other rapid transit lines throughout the world.

Rolling stock

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Line 14 uses rubber-tyre rolling stock. Three types of trains were used: MP 89CA (21 trains as of 3 November 2013), MP 05 (11 trains as of 20 March 2016), and MP 14 (22 train as of November 2022). The last MP89 and MP05 ran on the line in 2023 and were moved to the newly automated Line 4. The MP89 and MP05 contained six cars, while the MP14 trains which displaced them have eight cars. All Line 14 stations were designed from the start to accommodate eight cars, and the introduction of the MP 14 greatly increased capacity on the line.[6]

 

Stations

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Station Image Commune Opened Interchanges Distance (in km)
Saint-Denis–Pleyel   Saint-Denis 24 June 2024     (at Carrefour Pleyel)
    (at Stade de France–Saint-Denis)
0.0
Mairie de Saint-Ouen
Région Île-de-France
  Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine 14 December 2020     1.1 1.1
Saint-Ouen   Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine, Clichy 14 December 2020     (at Saint-Ouen) 1.2 2.3
Porte de Clichy
Tribunal de Paris
  Paris (17th) 28 January 2021    
   
   
1.6 3.9
Pont Cardinet   Paris (17th) 14 December 2020     (at Pont Cardinet) 0.6 4.5
Saint-Lazare   Paris (8th) 16 December 2003        
    (at Saint-Augustin)
    (at Haussmann–Saint-Lazare)
      (at Saint-Lazare)
1.7 6.2
Madeleine   Paris (8th) 15 October 1998       0.7 6.9
Pyramides   Paris (1st) 15 October 1998     1.0 7.9
Châtelet   Paris (1st, 4th) 15 October 1998          
        (at Châtelet–Les Halles)
1.2 9.1
Gare de Lyon   Paris (12th) 15 October 1998    
      (at Gare de Lyon)
    (at Gare de Lyon)
2.4 11.5
Bercy   Paris (12th) 15 October 1998     0.8 12.3
Cour Saint-Émilion   Paris (12th) 15 October 1998 1.0 13.3
Bibliothèque François Mitterrand   Paris (13th) 15 October 1998     0.7 14.0
Olympiades   Paris (13th) 26 June 2007 0.9 14.9
Maison Blanche   Paris (13th) 24 June 2024     1.0 15.9
Kremlin-Bicêtre - Gentilly
Hôpital Bicêtre
  Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, Gentilly 24 June 2024 1.6 17.5
Villejuif–Gustave Roussy   Villejuif January 2025 1.9 19.4
L'Haÿ-les-Roses   Chevilly-Larue, L'Haÿ-les-Roses 24 June 2024 2.1 21.5
Chevilly-Larue
Marché International
  Chevilly-Larue 24 June 2024     2.2 23.7
Thiais–Orly
Pont de Rungis
  Thiais 24 June 2024     (at Pont de Rungis–Aéroport d'Orly) 1.3 25.0
Paray-Vieille-Poste
Aéroport d'Orly
  Paray-Vieille-Poste 24 June 2024     2.3 27.3

Architecture

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The exotic garden in Gare de Lyon.

The conceptual design of the stations sought to evoke space and openness. The size of stations, their corridors and transfer halls brings the line architecturally closer to those of the RER rather than the existing Métro lines. The RATP opted for a specific style of the new line, for instance lightly coloured tiling rather than bitumen. The use of space was designed in a contemporary manner: voluminous spaces mixed plenty of light with modern materials and overall eased the flow of passengers. According to the designers, the stations should be the reflection of a "noble public space, monumental in spirit, urban in its choice of forms and materials". Four architects designed the first seven stations on the line: Jean-Pierre Vaysse & Bernard Kohn six of them, and Antoine Grumbach & Pierre Schall the station Bibliothèque.[S 2]

Saint-Lazare benefits from a well of natural light visible on the platforms, even though they are five levels below the surface. The station's exit is constructed from a glass bubble designed by Jean-Marie Charpentier and situated just in front of the Gare de Paris-Saint-Lazare, pointing towards the row of bus-stops.[citation needed]

Pyramides and Madeleine are endowed with a particular lighting, bright sunshine outside falls onto the platforms; a system which evidently does not work at night. Madeleine has several video projectors which allow cultural installations, for example, one on Marlène Dietrich, an actress, during the autumn of 2003.[citation needed]

 
Olympiades station.

Gare de Lyon offers travellers the view of a tropical garden on the right side of trains towards Olympiades, as one enters the station. This garden is situated underneath RATP House at the foot of which the station was built. It occupies a space originally reserved for the Transport Museum. Moreover, it is the only station equipped with a central platform, the only possible layout in light of the area's underground construction density.[citation needed]

Bibliothèque François Mitterrand has its own unique design: monumental, fifteen metre pillars and stairs forming a semi-circle seventy metres in diameter.[citation needed]

Olympiades station was developed by the architects Ar.thème Associés following the line's guiding principles, defined by Bernard Kohn from 1991. The station thus is in keeping with others in its choice of materials (polished concrete arches, wood on the ceilings, etc.) as much as in its lighting, height of its ceilings, and platforms larger than the average on other lines.[citation needed]

On the other hand, certain stations on the line are notable due to the disagreeable odour of humidity and sulfur that one can sometimes find as far as the changeover halls. Due to the line's relative depth, it runs underneath the water-table, creating a constant risk of seepage, similar to that found on Line E of the RER.[30]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ (éd. 2004:135–136)
  2. ^ p. 47

References

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  1. ^ "Paris inaugurates Line 14 extension". International Railway Journal. 15 December 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d Compagnon, Sébastian; Gairaud, Marie-Anne (24 June 2024). "Ligne 14 de Saint-Denis - Pleyel à l'aéroport d'Orly : « Ces nouvelles stations, c'est vraiment waouh ! »". leparisien.fr (in French). Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  3. ^ "New section of Metro Line 14 opened". InfraSite.net. 2 July 2007. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2007.
  4. ^ "Ile-de-France : 14 rames MP05 de plus pour la ligne 14". 14 November 2012. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  5. ^ "Alstom's first MP14 metro train has started carrying passengers on Line 14 in Paris, which currently connects Olympiades and Saint-Lazare". 13 October 2020. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
  6. ^ a b "La 14 passe à 8 voitures sur toute la ligne !". Prolongement d'Olympiades à Aéroport d'Orly de la ligne 14 du métro (in French). Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  7. ^ La Vie du Rail, "Météor: Les premiers pas du métro de l'an 2000", number 2507, 9 August 1995, page 16
  8. ^ "La couleur pourpre" Archived 4 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Les pieds dans la prise...", MétroPole, Archived 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ MétroPole – Coincé à faire un demi-tour Archived 4 June 2012 at archive.today
  11. ^ La ligne 14 du métro victime d'une panne informatique www.cio-online.com Retrieved 5 October 2011. (in French)
  12. ^ "Communiqué de presse RATP – La ligne 14 fête ses 5 ans !" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 June 2006. Retrieved 5 October 2011. (in French)
  13. ^ Le Parisien, "Le métro compte une nouvelle station", 26 juin 2007
  14. ^ "Conseil général des Ponts et Chaussées – Effondrement sur le chantier METEOR" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2011. Retrieved 5 October 2011. (824 KB), avril 2003
  15. ^ "Une cour d'école s'effondre à Paris" Archived 18 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine, l'Humanité
  16. ^ "Alstom's new automatic MP14 metro enters commercial service on the Line 14 extension in Paris and its region" (Press release). Alstom SA. 14 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  17. ^ "Prolongement de la ligne 14 de Saint-Lazare à Mairie de Saint-Ouen" (in French). RATP. Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  18. ^ "Paris : la ligne 14 prolongée va ouvrir le 17 décembre, annonce Valérie Pécresse" (in French). Le Figaro. 11 October 2020. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  19. ^ "La course d'obstacles du tunnelier Valérie s'achève avec succès" (Press release). societedugrandparis.fr. 23 April 2021. (in French)
  20. ^ "Calendrier, Prolongement d'Olympiades à Aéroport d'Orly de la ligne 14 du métro" (in French). RATP. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  21. ^ Dumas, Nicolas (11 April 2024). "Prolongement des lignes 11, 14 et du RER E: les dates d'inauguration se précisent". Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  22. ^ https://www.parisaeroport.fr/en/passengers/access/paris-orly/public-transport/metro-line-14
  23. ^ Hasse, Benoît (19 December 2024). "Les métros de la ligne 14 s'arrêteront enfin à la gare Villejuif-Gustave-Roussy... dans un mois". leparisien.fr (in French). Retrieved 20 December 2024.
  24. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 October 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Modernisation du métro (in French). STIF. Retrieved 11 February 2012
  25. ^ Données de fréquentation : Statistiques 2005 du STIF, les transports en commun en chiffres, page 16
  26. ^ "Trafic annuel et journalier". www.omnil.fr. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  27. ^ MétroPole – Kaba prend les portes Archived 16 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Siemens Transportation Systems – Nos réalisations, Paris – ligne 1, Siemens. Retrieved 4 October 2011(in French)
  29. ^ "Driverless CBTC System for Line 14, Paris, France". Siemens AG. Archived from the original on 19 October 2006. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
  30. ^ MétroPole – Ce métro à l'odeur morose Archived 28 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  1. ^ p. 10
  2. ^ pp. 69–73
  3. ^ pp. 7–9

Bibliography

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  • (in French) "Naissance d'un métro (nouvelle ligne 14)". La Vie du Rail magazine (in French) (Special issue). Éditions La Vie du Rail. October 1998.
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