Tramscape Tramway Photographs
|
|
|
|
|
Bordeaux's magnificent river frontage - served by trams, but
due to the innovative "APS" system, not "despoiled"
by poles and overhead power lines. |
In the city centre power supplied is also by a central conductor strip between the rails. This tram is heading south on line B and is approaching The Grand-Theatre tram stop located on Cours de l'Intendance. |
Outside the city centre and with certain exceptions, trams run "under the wires", but great effort has been made to make the surroundings pleasant. This tram is heading out of the city on Avenue de Thiers where trees have been planted and the reservation grassed. |
Had all gone to plan, it would have been a remarkable event. Three
complete new lines through the centre of Bordeaux would have been opened at
the end of 2003 in one of the most remarkable tramway revivals ever. As it was,
the eastern part of Line A opened from Meriadeck, through the city centre and
across the Garonne river to the neighbouring communities of Cenon (La Morlette)
and Lormont (Lauriers) to the north-east of Bordeaux on December 21st of that
year, and streches of the planned Line C (St Jean Station to Quinconces) on
24th April 2004 and Line B (St-Nicolas to Quinconces) on 15th May. Together,
these lines comprised 14.7 kilometres of route out of a total planned length
of 43.3 km, which was to be opened in two main phases by the year 2007.
Despite
the delays, the speed at which Bordeau built its new tramway system was remarkable.
It was not until the mid 1990s that a tramway was seriously considered, yet
on February 18th 1997, the association of communities forming the Bordeaux connurabation
agreed to proceed with the project and the necessary Declaration of Public Utility
(DUP) was granted by the French government on January 26th 2000. Even after
receiving this go-ahead, the project was delayed by several judicial procedures
and the ambitious plan to have the first stage opened before the end of 2002
was not achieved. However, by the standards of any other European country, Bordeaux
had not just one line, but an entire new network operating in double-quick time.
Despite
the speed of construction, the job was not a slip-shod one. In common with modern
French tramways, enormous effort was made to design an attractive system, blending
in with the city's historic architecture (the entire city centre is an UNESCO
World Heritage Site) and making the suburban alignments as attractive as possible
with grassed reservations being used wherever possible. It did mean, however,
that the centre of Bordeaux was one large building site duringthe period of
construction. Three routes crossed the city centre, all on separate routes with
each crossing the others at one point in the city centre meaning that three
tram "interchanges" had to be built (these being at Hotel de Ville
(Lines A and B), Porte de Bourgogne (A and C) and Quinconces (B and C). The
big advantage of building all three lines at the same time was that, although
disuption would be severe, it would be short-lived as the entire planned city
centre network would be completed in one phase and future disruption would be
minimal.
The delays which did occur were primarily due to one factor.
Not only was Bordeaux aiming for an ambitios network - it was also employing
revolutionary, untested technology for current collection in the city centre.
Bordeaux's "first generation", whose last operational line closed
in 1958, was one of France's largest, and in the city centre, much of the tramway
was powered from an underground conduit, so that no overhead was needed. When
the new tram system was proposed, many people assumed that a conduit system
could also be reintoduced. The cost and practicality of such a method of current
collection effectively ruled it out, but the pressure to find a solution which
spared Bordeaux's magnificent architectural vistas, especially that along the
left bank of the Garonne remained, especially from conservatin groups. The system
adopted was the so-called "Alimentation par Sol" (APS). This involves
the laying of a central conductor strip between the two running rails comprising
8-metre long conductor strips separated by 3.5 m long neutral strips. With power
controlled by "Coffrets" (small boxes placed at a distance of approx
22 m apart), the conductor strip is electrified only once the tram is direct
above any given 8-metre long section, so that no part of the conductor strip
is "live" at any other time and is therefore totally safe for other
road users. The APS system is now in use throughout the city centre and in certain
stretches of line outside the city centre, but the cost (around 4 times that
of tradtional overhead) and practicality (changeover to pantograph collection
at tram stops) has kept this to a minimum - and even some small streches of
APS have now been converted to overhead collection. The APS system, like any
untried technology, caused major problems with disruptions to services common
in the first few months of operation.
The Bordeaux network is made up
of three lines :
A (Blue) : West - North East : From Merignac
Centre via Meriadeck, Hotel de Ville and Porte de Bourgogne, cross river to
Cenon. From Carnot - Mairie de Cenon the line rises steeply on a viadict to
Buttiniere, where the line forks northwards to Lormont-Lauriers and south to
Floriac Dravemont. An extension is shortly to be ready to extend from Lormont-Lauriers
to Bassens Carbon-Blanc. In the west, the line is planned to be extended to
Merignac les Pins and longer term, with a branch from the existing line at Quatre-Chemins,
to Boreaux's International Airport.
Opened :
Meriadeck to Lormont-Lauriers
and La Morlette on 21st March 2003 : 9.6 km, 20 stations
Meriadeck to Saint-Augustin
on 26th September 2005 : 2.8 km, 6 stations
La Morlette to Floriac Dravemont
on 27th February 2007 : 1.7 km, 3 stations
Saint Augustin - Merignac Centre
on 21st June 2007 : 4.6 km, 8 stations
B (Red) : South West -
North : From Pessac Centre via Hetel de Ville and Quinconces to Bassins a Flot.
In the south west, a branch to Pessac-Alouette is in planning. In the north
an extension to Claveaux is under construction, with the ultimate planned destination
being Bordeaux-Nord.
Opened :
Quinconces to Saint-Nicolas on 15th May
2004 : 2.2 km, 7 stations
Saint-Nicolas to Pessac-Bougnard on 3rd July 2004
:
Pessac-Bougnard to Pessac-Centre on 29th May 2007 ; 1.3 km, 2 stations
Quinconces
to Bassins a Flot on 23rd July 2007 : 2.6 km, 5 stations
C (Green)
: South - North : From Begles (Terres-Neuves) via Gare St Jean, Porte de
Bourgogne and Quinconces to Les Aubiers. Extensions are planned for both ends
of the line to Villeneuve-d'Ornon and Bordeaux Lac respectively.
Opened
:
Gare St Jean to Quinconces on 24th April 2004 : 2.9 km, 7 stations
Quinconces
to Grand Parc on 19th November 2007 : 5 stations
Grand Parc to Les Aubiers
on 28th February 2008 : 2 stations
Gare St Jean to Begles Terres Neuves on
28th February 2008 : 3 stations
The trams used are all of the Citadis
type built by Alstom and styled individually for Bordeaux's own specification.
Two different lengths of car were ordered, all 2.4 m broad for the standard-gauge
track : 38 eight axled Citadis 402 (44 metre long with 90 seats and standing
capacity for 210 passengers) and 6 six-axled Citadis 302 (33 m, 66 seats, 134
standees), with phase two purchases bringing the total up to 70 trams (56 longer
and 14 shorter cars). The Citadis 302 are employed on line C
In
the peak period, services run around every 4 minutes and this attractive level
of service has had a very positive effect on patronage. Trams are now carrying
many more pasengers than were using the bus services in operation prior
to tramway introduction, and overall passenger numbers are rising. Trams can
get extremely busy in the city centre. There is little scope for increasing
capacity at present - and passenger numbers will no doubt increase once
the planned extensions come into operation.
Bordeaux's tramway is now
a massive success, both in terms of passenger attractiveness, and now that the
problems with the APS system have been largely overcome, operational efficiency.
It is becoming a victim of its own success. It has fully justified the
confidence shown in it by the Mayor of Bordeaux and famous national politician,
Alain Juppe, who was a driving force in promoting the tramway after many years
of opposition by the previous long-standing mayor, Jaques Chaban-Delmas. Chaban-Delmas
took office in 1947 and was a key figure in the run-down and closure of the
first Bordeaux tram system (and the trolleybus network which closed in 1957)
and later promoted the building of a metro system for Bordeaux. Had it not been
for the massive cost, even of a VAL Mini-metro system similar to that built
in Lille, and the difficulties of tunneling in the sandy soils under Bordeaux
it is quite possible that Bordeaux would have followed through on its 1986 decision
to adopt a system using this technology. The reversal of the decision under
the Juppe administration has led to the successful outcome for Bordeaux - a
highly efficient tram system, covering much of the city, with sceptical neighbourhoods
now clamouring to be linked to the network, and the successful implementation
of the ground-level collection system which could now give an impetus to further
tram building in cities which have not wished to hang wires in sensitive architectural
areas.















Photographs by Gordon Stewart