Paris Métro Line 10 in the context of Sèvres – Babylone (Paris Métro)


Paris Métro Line 10 in the context of Sèvres – Babylone (Paris Métro)

⭐ Core Definition: Paris Métro Line 10

Paris Métro Line 10 is one of the sixteen currently open métro lines in Paris, France. The line links Boulogne–Pont de Saint-Cloud, in Boulogne-Billancourt, to the Gare d'Austerlitz, traveling under the rather bourgeois neighborhoods of the Rive Gauche — the southern half of Paris — the 16th arrondissement and the neighbouring commune of Boulogne-Billancourt.

The line runs entirely underground and stretches 11.7 kilometres (7.3 mi) across 23 stations. It has the least traffic of the fourteen main metro lines, excluding lines 3bis and 7bis.

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👉 Paris Métro Line 10 in the context of Sèvres – Babylone (Paris Métro)

Sèvres–Babylone (French pronunciation: [sɛvʁ(ə) babilɔn]) is a station on Lines 10 and 12 of the Paris Métro. It is located at the intersection of Boulevard Raspail and rue de Sèvres, on the border of the 6th and 7th arrondissements. Rue de Sèvres boasts two flagship Paris fashion stores: Le Bon Marché at number 22 and Hermès at number 17.

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Paris Métro Line 10 in the context of Paris Métro Line 8

Paris Métro Line 8 (French: Ligne 8 du métro de Paris) is one of the sixteen lines of the Paris Métro currently opened. It connects Balard (Porte de Sèvres) in the southwestern part of Paris to Pointe du Lac station in the southeastern suburban city of Créteil, prefecture of the Val-de-Marne department, following a parabolic route across Paris. Last line proposed by Fulgence Bienvenüe's original 1898 Paris Métro project, line 8 opened in July 1913 and was initially intended to link Porte d'Auteuil and Opéra. With 105.5 million passengers in 2017, it is the network's eighth busiest line, as well as the current third longest (after Lines 13 and 14, even though Line 13 has a fork, and Line 15 is set to become the longest once fully opened), at 23.4 km (14.5 mi) in length. Alongside Line 7, it serves 38 distinct stations, the most of any line on the network, Grand Paris Express (lines 15 to 18) included. Line 8 interchanges with all other Métro lines but three : Lines 2, 3bis and 7bis.

The line was substantially modified during the 1930s as Line 10 took over the western section from La Motte - Picquet to Porte d'Auteuil. The current route serves the southwestern part of the French Capital, including the Champ de Mars, the Invalides, the Concorde Place, the Opéra Garnier, the Grands Boulevards, The places of République and Bastille as well as the Bois de Vincennes, before ending in the southeastern inner suburbs through the communes of Charenton-le-Pont, Maisons-Alfort and Créteil, which the line reached in 1974 at Créteil–Préfecture station, after several extensions. Line 8 was the first to connect the prefecture of one of the new departments of Île-de-France, more than a decade before Line 5 to Bobigny, and Line 15 to Nanterre in the near-future. Line 8 is also the only Paris underground line to cross the Seine and its principal tributary, the Marne river, above ground via a bridge between Charenton – Écoles and École Vétérinaire de Maisons-Alfort, it also crosses the Seine underground between Concorde and Invalides.

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Paris Métro Line 10 in the context of MF 67

The MF 67 (French: Métro Fer appel d'offres de 1967; English: Steel-wheeled metro ordered in 1967) is a fleet of steel-wheel electric multiple unit trains for the Paris Métro. The first MF 67 trains entered service on Line 3 in June 1968, and became one of the biggest orders for the Métro, with 1,482 cars constructed. The need to replace the Sprague-Thomson fleet, as well as increasing costs associated with the later-cancelled plan to introduce rubber-tyred trains on all Métro lines, were the main factors for the size of the order.

At its peak, during the late-1980s and the early-1990s, the MF 67 operated on eight of the (then) fifteen Métro lines (Lines 2, 3 and 3bis, 5, 7bis, 9, 10 and 12): the MF 67 also operated on Lines 7, 8 and 13 (including the old Line 14), all before the introduction of the MF 77 in 1978.

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Paris Métro Line 10 in the context of Porte d'Auteuil station

Porte d'Auteuil (French pronunciation: [pɔʁt dotœj]; lit. 'Gate of Auteuil') is an underground station on Line 10 of the Paris Métro. It is situated in the 16th arrondissement, on the edge of the Bois de Boulogne. Like the two stations to the east, Michel-Ange–Auteuil and Église d'Auteuil, it offers westbound services only, in the direction of Boulogne–Pont de Saint-Cloud.

In 2019, 622,094 travellers entered the metro system at Porte d'Auteuil, ranking it 296th of 302 stations.  In 2020, amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, traffic fell to 262,784, in 298th place of 304. In 2021, 375,748 travellers entered, 299th of 304 stations.

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