Iéna (Paris Métro)

Iéna ([jena]) is a station on Line 9 of the Paris Métro, named after the Avenue d'Iéna. The station opened on 27 May 1923 with the extension of the line from Trocadéro to Saint-Augustin. Iéna is the French name of Jena where the Napoleon's army beat Prussia in 1806 at the Battle of Jena. Nearby are the Guimet Museum (Asian art) and the Palais de Tokyo (contemporary art museum).

Iéna
Paris Métro station
Location16th arrondissement of Paris
Île-de-France
France
Coordinates48°51′52″N 2°17′36″E
Owned byRATP
Operated byRATP
Other information
Fare zone1
History
Opened27 May 1923 (1923-05-27)
Services
Preceding station   Paris Métro   Following station
Location
Iéna
Location within Paris

Station layout

Street Level
B1 Mezzanine
Line 9 platforms Side platform, doors will open on the right
Westbound toward Pont de Sèvres (Trocadéro)
Eastbound toward Mairie de Montreuil (Alma – Marceau)
Side platform, doors will open on the right
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gollark: Me, for some definitions of it. Also some other people who exist.
gollark: And?
gollark: Besides, every recent computer is designed partly by computer.
gollark: My laptop can happily do a few hundred billion floating point operations a second. You can manage about 0.01, optimistically.

References


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