List of trolleybus systems in France

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This is a list of trolleybus systems in France by région. It includes all trolleybus systems, past and present.

 Alsace

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Mulhouse 9 Oct 1908

5 Jul 1946

14 July 1918

1968

 
  Strasbourg 27 May 1939 31 Mar 1962  

 Aquitaine

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Bordeaux May 1940 1954  

 Bourgogne

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Dijon 7 Jan 1950 30 Mar 1966  

 Bretagne

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Brest 29 July 1947 1970  
  Saint-Malo 1906

10 Jul 1948

5 Jun 1907

30 Sep 1959

 

 Centre

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Tours 5 Oct 1947 29 Jun 1968  

 Franche-Comté

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Belfort 4 Jul 1952 1 Aug 1972  

 Haute-Normandie

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Le Havre 1 Aug 1947 28 Dec 1970  
  Rouen 2 Jan 1933 26 Jun 1970  

 Île-de-France

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Fontainebleau 15 Jul 1901 1913  
  Paris 15 Apr 1900

1912

12 Nov 1900

1914

at Saint-Mandé.

at Saint-Mandé. Also Jan 1922 demonstration.

  Vitry-sur-Seine 7 Apr 1925 8 Jul 1935  
  Porte de ChamperretBezons / Argenteuil 8 Jan 1943 31 Mar 1962  
  Porte de ChoisyChoisy-le-Roi and Porte d'ItalieThiais 16 Jan 1950 31 Mar 1966  

 Languedoc-Roussillon

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  NîmesRemoulins 10 Jul 1924 31 Dec 1927  
  Perpignan 21 Sep 1952 Jun 1968  

23x15px Limousin

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Limoges 14 Jul 1943   See also Trolleybuses in Limoges.

 Lorraine

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Forbach 19 May 1951 1 Nov 1969  
  Metz 14 Sep 1947 30 Apr 1966  
  Nancy 27 Sep 1982   Dual-mode (trolley/diesel) operation until about 2000. See note.
  • Note for Nancy: TVR opened 28 Jan 2001,[1] replacing dual-mode bus operation. Operation suspended 9 Mar 2001 - 13 Mar 2002 because of technical problems. TVR, Transport sur Voie Réservée, is the Guided Light Transit system, using a centre guide rail and marketed as "Trams sur pneus" (trams on tyres). In Nancy, TVR surface guidance only covers a portion of the route, and the vehicles are able to operate away from the guide rail in electric mode, using trolley poles, and thus the system is trolleybus,[2] despite the Nancy operator's marketing it as the tram. TVR systems elsewhere use pantographs, and consequently are not commonly regarded as trolleybus systems (see note at bottom of list).[2][3]

 Midi-Pyrénées

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Montauban Jan 1903 1904  

23x15px Pays de la Loire

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Le Mans 13 Nov 1947 1969  

23x15px Picardie

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Amiens 1946 Feb 1963  

 Poitou-Charentes

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Poitiers 9 Aug 1943 3 Mar 1965  

 Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  AubagneCuges-les-Pins 19 Sep 1927 20 Jul 1958  
  Marseille 13 Jun 1903

26 Apr 1942

1 Sep 1905

25 Jun 2004 [4]

First system connected Allauch and La Rose. Second system included an interurban line to Aix-en-Provence.
  Nice 30 Apr 1942 12 Sep 1970  
  Toulon 7 May 1949 19 Feb 1973  

 Rhône-Alpes

Name of System Location Date (From) Date (To) Notes
  Chambéry 6 Oct 1930 Jun 1940  
  Grenoble 1 Aug 1947 24 Jun 1999  
  Lyon 1 September 1905

4 Sep 1935

10 September 1906

-

First system located at Charbonnières-les-Bains.
See also Trolleybuses in Lyon.
  Modane - Lanslebourg 20 Aug 1923 Jun 1940  
  MoûtiersSalins (-les-Thermes) 15 Apr 1930 Mar 1965  
  Saint-Étienne 1 Jan 1942   System included an interurban line to Firminy.
See also Trolleybuses in Saint-Étienne.
  • Note: The TVR, or GLT, system in Caen and the Translohr system in Clermont-Ferrand are not listed, as they not commonly considered to be trolleybus systems,[2][3] since their vehicles use pantographs to collect current and therefore are not able to operate away from the surface guideway while remaining in electric mode. The GLT vehicles in Nancy, by comparison, are able to do so, as they use trolley poles to collect current, so the Nancy system is considered to be a trolleybus system.[2]

See also

Sources

Books and periodicals

  • Murray, Alan (2000). World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia. Reading, Berkshire, UK: Trolleybooks. ISBN 0-904235-18-1.
  • Trolleybus Magazine, various issues. National Trolleybus Association (UK). Bimonthly. ISSN 0266-7452.

References

  1. Trolleybus Magazine No. 237 (May–June 2001), p. 67.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Webb, Mary (ed.) (2009). "World Urban Tram and Light Rail Systems" and "World Urban Trolleybus Systems" (lists). Jane's Urban Transport Systems 2009-2010. Coulsdon, Surrey (UK): Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0-7106-2903-6.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Box, Roland (ed.). "Is it a Bus? Is it a Tram". Trolleybus Magazine No. 230 (March–April 2000), p. 26. National Trolleybus Association. ISSN 0266-7452.
  4. Trolleybus Magazine No. 258 (Nov.-Dec. 2004), p. 137.

Further reading

  • De Coster, Roland; Hamal, Thierry; and Stas, Dominique (eds.) (1997). TRAM 2000 - Flash 1997: France. Brussels, Belgium: TRAM 2000 asbl.

External links

  • Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons