LGV Est

The Ligne à Grande Vitesse Est européenne (East European High Speed Line), typically shortened to LGV Est, is a French high-speed rail line that connects Vaires-sur-Marne (near Paris) and Vendenheim (near Strasbourg). The line halved the travel time between Paris and Strasbourg and provides fast services between Paris and the principal cities of eastern France as well as Luxembourg, Germany, and Switzerland. The LGV Est is a segment of the Main line for Europe project to connect Paris with Budapest with high-speed rail service.

LGV Est
Overview
SystemSNCF
StatusOperational
LocaleÎle-de-France, Grand Est,
 France
TerminiVaires-sur-Marne, Île-de-France
Vendenheim, Grand Est
Stations3
Operation
OpenedPhase 1: 10 June 2007
Phase 2: 3 July 2016
OwnerSNCF Réseau
Operator(s)SNCF
Technical
Line length406 km (252 mi)
Number of tracksDouble track
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz[1]
Operating speed320 km/h (200 mph) to 350 km/h (220 mph)
SignallingTVM-430
ETCS Level 2
Route map
Line from Paris Gare de l'Est
22.7
0
Line to Strasbourg
10.1 LGV Interconnexion Est
38.3 MeauxReims
113.7 Champagne-Ardenne TGV
114.7 ÉpernayReims
from Châlons-en-Champagne
146.9 to Laon
147.8 to Verdun
213.5 Meuse TGV
230.9 River Meuse
(603 m)
270.6 NancyMetz
Lorraine-Vandières TGV (proposed)
271.7 River Moselle
(1115 m)
281.3 Lorraine TGV
from Metz
Baudrecourt junction
to Strasbourg
Line to Saarbrücken
from Nancy
Saverne Tunnel
(±4000 m)
406 Line from Nancy
Line to Strasbourg

The line was built in two phases. Construction on the 300 km (190 mi) from Vaires-sur-Marne to Baudrecourt (near Metz and Nancy) began in 2004; the first phase entered into service in June 2007. Construction on the 106 km (66 mi) second phase from Baudrecourt to Vendenheim began in June 2010; the second phase opened to commercial service on 3 July 2016. Opening of the second phase was delayed after a train derailed near Eckwersheim during commissioning trials, resulting in 11 deaths.

A specially modified train performed a series of high-speed tests on the first phase of the LGV Est prior to its opening. In April 2007, it reached a top speed of 574.8 km/h (159.6 m/s, 357.2 mph), becoming the fastest conventional train and fastest train on a national rail system (as opposed to dedicated test track).[2][3]

Route

The line passes through the French regions of Île-de-France and Grand Est. The first 300 km (190 mi) section of this new route, linking Vaires-sur-Marne near Paris to Baudrecourt in the Moselle, entered service on 10 June 2007. Constructed for speeds up to 350 km/h (220 mph), for commercial service it is initially operating at a maximum speed of 320 km/h (200 mph),[4] and was the fastest service in the world at average speed of 279.3 km/h (173.5 mph) between Lorraine and Champagne[5] until the Wuhan–Guangzhou High-Speed Railway opened in 2009. It is the first line in France to travel at this maximum speed in commercial service, the first in France to use ERTMS,[6] the new European rail signalling system and the first line also served by German ICE trains.[7][8] The second phase includes the 4,200-metre (13,800 ft) Saverne Tunnel.

History

Early proposals and planning

French TGV network, with the LGV Est in brown running east from Paris

In 1969, Metz politician Raymond Mondon requested a study of a fast train from Paris to Strasbourg along the route of the planned A4 autoroute.[9] In 1970–71, the International Union of Railways (UIC, based on its French acronym) developed a master plan of fast intercity connections in continental Europe. Its connection between Paris and Strasbourg was very similar to the route of the LGV Est. The UIC master plan called for this line to be constructed shortly after Paris-Lyon and Paris-Brussels lines. In 1974, the director of SNCF confirmed that the company wanted to follow the UIC master plan.[10]:57

Germany, which was developing the Transrapid maglev system, was long reserved about the TGV system being developed by France. A 1975 study concluded that the passenger traffic to only Alsace and Lorraine would not be enough for the financial feasibility of the line. In 1982, recognizing German reluctance to extend the line into Germany, SNCF president André Chadeau announced that the company would not build the LGV Est without government subsidies.[10]:58 The following year, Saverne engineer Charles Maetz convinced MPs Adrien Zeller and François Grussenmeyer to establish the East European TGV Association (French: l'Association TGV Est-Européen), which managed to bring together local authorities to support the project.[9]

The LGV Est is a direct result of a project begun in 1985 with the establishment of a working group chaired by Claude Rattier and later by Philippe Essig. Their report provided the basis for preliminary design studies conducted in 1992–93.[11][12]:12 The initial 1980s plan extended along a corridor from Paris to Munich. However, the expected passenger traffic along this corridor was quite low, unlike Paris-Lyon and Paris-Brussels/London corridors, and a direct route crossed a region of eastern France far from any major urban area.

In 1986, MP Marc Reymann submitted to the government a route that shared a common trunk line between the LGV Nord and LGV Est from Paris, through Charles de Gaulle Airport, to Soissons before forking into lines to Brussels (LGV Nord) and Strasbourg (LGV Est).[13] In 1988, the German government agreed to a rail line from Paris to Frankfurt via Saarbrücken.[10]:68

The following year, Philippe Essig presented the route that would later be built and at the same time addressed the other problem: financing. This route, further north than previous proposals, served Reims and Strasbourg. In order to avoid offending the cities of Nancy and Metz, which share an ancient rivalry, and avoid problems encountered during the construction of the A4 autoroute twenty years earlier, this route traveled directly to Strasbourg and passed midway between Nancy and Metz, where a single station would be built to serve both towns and improve relations between them.

Financing of this proposal called for contributions from local governments—a first in France for construction of a high-speed line—and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. This was a favorable financial arrangement for SNCF due to low ridership projections and because the population of the towns served were below a threshold for building a high-speed line. The complexity of financing resulted in the long delay of the project. Under the government of Pierre Beregovoy (French Prime Minister from 1992-1993), the government refused to contribute more than 25 billion francs to the project, and limited the route to Baudrecourt, to which the Alsace region threatened to withdraw its financial contribution to the project. After long delays under the successive governments, all wanting to limit the cost of the project, a two-phase project was finally accepted by all parties, provided that commitments were made for the quick completion of the second phase.[14]

Approval and launch of the project

On 1 April 1992, the project was added to the master plan of high-speed lines, in which it was classified as a priority project.[11] On 22 May 1992, France and Germany agreed to a Franco-German high-speed line consisting of a northern branch through Saarbrücken and Mannheim and a southern branch through Strasbourg and Karlsruhe. The same year a similar memorandum of understanding was signed between the transport ministers of France and Luxembourg.[11] At the European Council meeting in Essen in 1994, the LGV Est project was reaffirmed as a priority trans-European transport project.[11]

The expected socio-economic benefits of the LGV project was lower than other ongoing high-speed rail projects: LGV Bretagne-Pays de la Loire and LGV Bordeaux–Toulouse.[15] The line is redundant to three existing rail lines: Paris to Strasbourg, Paris to Mulhouse, and the combined Ligne de Trilport à Bazoches and Reims-Metz lines.[12]:18 Additionally, the international potential of the planned line seemed low, as Germany had little interest in the development of high-speed lines,[16] favored domestic north–south axes, and due to the competition between SNCF and Deutsche Bahn.[17]

The decision to build the line is politically motivated by fostering European integration, serving the European institutions in Strasbourg, and geographical balance of French high-speed rail lines, following the construction of high-speed lines from Paris to the southeast (LGV Sud-Est, LGV Rhône-Alpes, & LGV Méditerranée), the southwest (LGV Atlantique), and north (LGV Nord).

A public inquiry was conducted in 1994.[11] The following year, a report conducted at the request of the Transport Minister advocated a complete redesign of the project, with an endpoint of the line at Épernay and from there onwards the adaptation of the existing Paris-Strasbourg line to accommodate high-speed tilting trains.[18] In Nancy, which this route favored, this route was championed locally by Gérard Lignac, director of the L'Est Républicain newspaper.[19] Although a budget was not completed and the planned phasing of the project was opposed by Lorraine and Alsace,[20] the déclaration d'utilité publique was signed on 14 May 1996,[21] two days before the deadline after which a new public inquiry would have been required.

A protocol for the construction and financing of the LGV Est was signed between the national government, RFF, SNCF, and local governments.[11] The financing agreement for the first phase of the line from Vaires-sur-Marne to Baudrecourt was signed on 7 December 2000 between the numerous partners in the project, including 17 local governments.[11] On 18 December 2003, the Jean-Pierre Raffarin government announced that it would proceed with several TGV projects, including construction of the second phase of the LGV Est, which would begin in 2010. On 24 January 2007, the financial arrangements for studies and preparatory work for the second phase of the line from Baudrecourt to Strasbourg was signed.[22]

Construction

Construction of the line was divided into two phases. The first phase traverses 300 km (190 mi) of relatively flat land from Vaires-sur-Marne (20 km (12 mi) east of Paris) to Baudrecourt (between Metz and Nancy), where it intersects the Metz–Saarbrücken and Paris-Strasbourg rail lines.[23][24] Construction on the first phase began in 2002 and it entered into service on 10 June 2007. Until the completion of the second phase, TGV trains continued from here towards Strasbourg on the older (lower-speed) existing Paris-Strasbourg track.[24] The second phase traversed 106 km (66 mi) of rougher terrain from Baudrecourt to Vendenheim, on the northern edge of the Strasbourg metropolitan area. Construction on the second phase began in August 2010 and it entered service on 3 July 2016.

Between the opening of the first and second phases, trains from Strasbourg, Colmar, and southern Germany travelled along the classic Paris-Strasbourg line until Réding, then the Réding–Metz railway to join the LGV Est at Baudrecourt. However, trains from Nancy and Sarrebourg traveled along the Paris-Strasbourg line until Frouard, then took the Frouard–Novéant railway to join the LGV Est at Vandières.

Besides the construction of the LGV, the project includes:

Journey times have decreased as follows:

FromToOriginal TimeFirst PhaseSecond Phase
ParisStrasbourg4h 002h 201h 50
ParisReims1h 350h 45-
ParisSedan2h 502h 00-
ParisCharleville-Mézières2h 301h 35-
ParisNancy2h 451h 30-
ParisMetz2h 451h 25-
ParisLuxembourg3h 552h 05-
LuxembourgStrasbourg2h 17-1h 35[25]
ParisBasel4h 553h 20-
ParisZürich5h 504h 35-
ParisFrankfurt6h 153h 503h 40
ParisStuttgart6h 103h 403h 10
ParisSaarbrücken4h 001h 50-

Phase one

Earthworks for the first phase between Vaires-sur-Marne and Baudrecourt started in spring 2002. The contractors took three years to complete the earthworks and some 327 pieces of structural work as well as re-establishing communications for people and wildlife. Tracklaying and building the new stations started in 2004.

As the first infrastructure project of its kind to be declared a public utility by the Ministry of the Environment, the LGV Est is also the first railway to be financed largely by the French regions and the European Union (EU). The main contractor for the project is RFF (Réseau ferré de France), the state-owned company responsible for managing the French rail infrastructure.

Civil engineering works were distributed in eight contracts which were awarded after bidding by five companies: SNCF, ISL, Tractebel, Scétauroute and Setec. This is the first time there has been competition for the construction of a TGV line since reform of the rail system in 1997 and the involvement of RFF. SNCF Engineering, in partnership with EEG Simecsol succeeded in obtaining four of the contracts (including one for the second phase), this being 50% of the civil engineering project. Moreover, it directed the entire superstructure works project (track, signals and electrification) under the responsibility of Réseau Ferré de France.

Illustration of the alignment of the second phase of the LGV Est.

On 9 June 2007, the TGV Est made its inaugural voyage, leaving from the Gare de l'Est at 7:36am. Notable passengers included: François Fillon, the French Prime Minister, Alain Juppé, the Minister of Sustainable Development, and the Argentinian Ambassador to France. The Prime Minister hailed this event as "a beautiful symbol of the capacity of our country to innovate when it is united, a symbol of European France, of the knowledge of French businesses, and a symbol that gives confidence in the future." He hailed this achievement as "a union by train between France and its German, Luxembourgish, and Swiss partners, between the European institutions and the [French] capital."

Phase two

On 2 September 2009, infrastructure manager RFF announced the tendering for the second phase. Financing was finalized on 1 September 2009, with a mix of sources ranging from the French and Luxembourgish governments, regional governments, the EU, and RFF.[26] The full line was planned to open on 3 April 2016,[27] but that opening was delayed to 3 July by a major accident during testing of the line.[28] Until then, TGV ran between these two cities via the existing Metz-Strasbourg line at the 160 km/h normal speed for the line.

The final weld of rails on the second phase took place on 31 March 2015 and was accompanied by a ceremony marking the end of construction of Phase 2, although work on signaling continued.[27] The opening of the second phase had been scheduled for 3 April 2016, but was delayed after a train derailed near Eckwersheim during commissioning trials, resulting in 11 deaths and damage to a bridge on the line.[28] The line opened on 3 July 2016.[29] A landslide in March 2020 caused a derailment, with 22 minor injuries, and one serious.[30]

World speed record

A series of high speed trials, named Operation V150, were conducted on the LGV Est prior to its June 2007 opening using a specially modified train. The trials were conducted jointly by SNCF, TGV builder Alstom, and LGV Est owner Réseau Ferré de France between 15 January 2007 and 15 April 2007. Following a series of increasingly high speed runs, the official speed record attempt took place on 3 April 2007.[31][32] The top speed of 574.8 km/h (159.6 m/s, 357.2 mph) was reached at kilometre point 191 near the village of Le Chemin, between the Meuse and Champagne-Ardenne TGV stations, where the most favourable profile exists.

The 515.3 km/h speed record of 1990 was unofficially broken multiple times during the test campaign that preceded and followed the certified record attempt, the first time on 13 February 2007 with a speed of 554.3 km/h, and the last time on 15 April 2007 with a speed of 574.8 km/h.

Construction financing

The total cost was about €4 billion, apportioned as follows:

  • 61% public funds
  • 17% RFF
  • 22% SNCF (including €800 million for TGV rolling stock)

Controversy

The LGV Est was a subject of public debate for several reasons:

  • The 2006 commencement of first phase service was pushed back to 10 June 2007.
  • This was the first LGV construction in which local communities had to contribute to the funding together with the state government and European Union. The contribution was fixed following a capital structure group discussion of the communities, depending on the time decrease for users in relation to the Île de France. Alsace has therefore had to pay almost €300 million. This financial model continued for the second phase, and is used for other new LGV lines as well.

Timeline

  • 22 May 1992: French-German La Rochelle summit; commitment by France and Germany to create a high-speed rail line linking the two countries, comprising a northern branch via Saarbrücken-Mannheim and a southern branch via Strasbourg-Karlsruhe
  • 14 May 1996: declaration of public utility
  • 2001: refurbishment of a number of stations in Germany (for example Kaiserslautern) and launch of infrastructure work in Germany (line upgrading for 200 km/hour on sections of the conventional line between Saarbrücken and Mannheim)
  • 28 January 2002: official beginning of works for first phase between Vaires-sur-Marne and Baudrecourt
  • 18 December 2003: government of Jean-Pierre Raffarin announces approximately 50 improvement projects, of which eight are for the TGV, including second phase works due to begin about 2010; additionally, connection of TGV Est with ICE to occur between 2007 and 2010
  • 19 October 2004: laying of the first LGV Est rail at Saint-Hilaire-au-Temple (Marne) by the transport minister, Gilles de Robien; earthworks are 80% complete and of the 338 structural projects, 290 (of which 14 are viaducts) are complete
  • June 2006: the catenary between Marne and Meuse is powered
  • 31 October 2006: the catenary for the entire length of the line is powered to enable testing[33]
  • 13 November 2006: beginning of technical testing of the central 210 km of the line using specialized trains to check correct track geometry, etc., at speeds up to 320 km/h[34]
  • 25 January 2007: An initial budget of €94 million is allocated to the second phase of the line between Baudrecourt and Strasbourg
  • 30 January 2007: The power is on over the whole length of 300 km.
  • 1 February 2007: The control centre at Pagny-sur-Moselle is opened.
  • 13 February 2007: A new world record for train speed is unofficially set by a TGV during tests on the LGV Est.[35]
  • 3 April 2007: An official new world speed record for conventional trains of 574.8 km/h is set by a TGV on the LGV Est.
  • 9 June 2007: The inaugural voyage of the LGV Est is completed (see below).
  • 10 June 2007: The LGV Est opens for commercial service.
  • 16 May 2008: First Stop of ICE-MF due to a transformer fire on this route.
  • 29 October 2009: the European Commission announced that LGV Est's second phase has been awarded €76M, out of total costs of €633.3M. The Commission stated the funding had been brought forward to accelerate construction due to the economic crisis.[36]
  • June 2010: Construction begins on phase 2[37]
  • 10 November 2011 – 19 June 2012: First bore of the Saverne Tunnel bored.[38]
  • 26 September 2012 – 25 February 2013: Second bore of the Saverne Tunnel bored.[38]
  • 31 March 2015: Final weld of rails on second phase marking the end of construction of the second phase.[27]
  • 14 November 2015: A TGV derailed in the commune of Eckwersheim during testing on the then-unopened second phase, killing at least ten people[39]
  • 3 July 2016: Opening of the second phase, delayed by 3 months by the accident.[28]

Accidents

  • On 16 May 2008, a car of an ICE 3MF at Annet-sur-Marne caught fire. The train, with around 300 passengers, had to be evacuated after a transformer had caught fire.[40] The cause is suspected to be a defective drive motor, from which parts had come loose and damaged the transformer.
TGV with world record power unit (V150) as ICE replacement Paris-Frankfurt in Saarbrücken Hbf in June 2008 (with German engine driver)
  • On 12 June 2008, a "short turnaround" of an ICE coming from Paris, which was to return from the St. Ingbert in Saarland to Paris, resulted in several slightly injured travelers. All passengers should change at this small station into a substitute IC arrived from Frankfurt; its passengers, on the other hand, should transfer to the turning ICE. As a result of several faulty ICE units, some intermittent ICE journeys completely failed or were replaced by TGV trains in the same week; On 13 June 2008, the DB then restricted the continuous traffic on the POS Northast for the time being from five to three connections. The remaining rides were broken: TGV operated Paris-Saarbrücken and back; IC Saarbrücken-Frankfurt and back. Only two of the six existing ICE trainsets were needed. From 19 June 2008, the trains went through again, but some courses were still served by TGV. These can not turn in Mannheim and must drive over Käfertal, which leads to small delays.
  • On the afternoon of 8 July 2008, ICE 9555 Paris-Frankfurt collided in the area of the Kennelgarten station near Kaiserslautern with a truck that had been stuck in the gravel while turning in a construction site. The approximately 400 passengers of the ICE remained unhurt, but six of the eight cars of the ICE were damaged. The train could later continue with its own strength to Kaiserslautern, where the passengers had to change to a replacement train.
  • In July 2008, there were again numerous ICE failures; from 21 July – 23 August 2008, TGV units regularly helped with one full-round journey. Nevertheless, passengers often had to change trains in or from Saarbrücken, Homburg / Saar or Forbach (F) to or from TGV trains, or in some cases were not carried as a result of a lack of vehicles. Also in the course of autumn and in the winter of 2008/2009 the ICE disturbances continued; there were always TGV replacement services and / or breaking the connection in Saarbrücken Hbf.
  • On 14 November 2015, the TGV accident in Eckwersheim caused the most severe accident with a TGV. During a test drive a train derailed due to excessive speed in a curve and partially crashed into the Rhine-Marne Canal. 11 people died, 42 others were injured, 12 of them seriously.

Line map

gollark: Marriage should obviously be a possibly-cyclic directed weighted graph.
gollark: Personal feelings on values? Probably consequentialist arguments that it works out badly if governments have very strong control?
gollark: Or at least in longer conversations.
gollark: We are, apparently, sane enough to get above "social shaming" most of the time.
gollark: I have this nice diagram.

See also

References

  1. "RFF - Map of electrified railway lines" (PDF).
  2. Matsuda, Kiyotaka (20 April 2015). "World's Fastest Train Records Speed of 375 Miles Per Hour". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2 July 2016. The speed record for a train running on a national railway system, rather than a test track, remains in the hands of conventional rail, with a modified version of an Alstom SA TGV model reaching 575 km/h in France in 2007.
  3. "Fastest train on a national rail system". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  4. Colin Taylor (September 2007). "TGV Est lifts the record" (PDF). Railway Gazette International.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 17 June 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. "Premiernfahrt nach Paris" (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. Archived from the original on 10 July 2007. Retrieved 6 December 2007.
  7. Staff writer (2006). Die Bahn am Ball (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. p. 96.
  8. Schontz, André (1990). Le chemin de fer et la gare de Metz (in French). Editions Serpenoise. p. 205. ISBN 978-2876920613.
  9. Felten, Arsène; Schontz, André (2007). Le TGV-Est (in French). Éditions Serpenoise. ISBN 9782876927261.
  10. Des études préliminaires à la convention de financement (Report) (in French). LGV Est. Archived from the original on 19 March 2004. Retrieved 11 June 2007.
  11. Bilan LOTI de la LGV Est européenne phase 1 (PDF) (Report) (in French). Réseau Ferré de France. May 2013. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  12. "Assemblée Nationale: 3e séance du mardi 28 octobre 1986" (PDF). Journal Official de la République Française: Débats Parlementaires (in French). 94 (3): 5435. 1986. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  13. "TGV Est-européen - Paris-Strasbourg en 2h20" [East European TGV - Paris-Strasbourg in 2 hours, 20 minutes]. La Vie du rail magazine (in French). La Vie du rail. June 2007.
  14. Fève, Michel. "Le financement des trains à grande vitesse (TGV)" (in French). French government. Archived from the original on 29 April 2001. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  15. Essig, Philippe (1997). "Le concept TGV, des origines au TGV pendulaire" [The high speed train concept, from the origins to the pendular system] (PDF). Les Cahiers Scientifiques du Transport. 32 (in French): 39. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 July 2016. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  16. "L'avenir du réseau européen à grande vitesse" (PDF). École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées (in French). February 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2005.
  17. Lignac, Gerard (September 1999). "Commentaires du President Gerard Lignac" (PDF). L'Est Républicain. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2008.
  18. Zembrilien, Pierre (1997). "Les fondements de la remise en cause du Schéma Directeur des liaisons ferroviaires à grande vitesse : des faiblesses avant tout structurelles". Annales de Géographie (in French). 106 (593): 183–194. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  19. "Décret du 14 mai 1996 déclarant d'utilité publique et urgents les travaux de construction d'une ligne nouvelle de chemin de fer à grande vitesse dite " T.G.V.-Est européen " entre Paris et Strasbourg, de création des gares nouvelles et d'aménagement des installations terminales de ladite ligne, ainsi que portant mise en compatibilité des plans d'occupation des sols des communes concernées". Journal Officiel de la République Française. 113 (in French): 7320. 15 May 1996.
  20. Doyen, Fernand (25 January 2007). "Un financement pour la deuxième phase". L’Est Républicain (in French). Archived from the original on 7 October 2007.
  21. "RFF attribue le marché du Tunnel de Saverne" (PDF). BG-21.com (in French). Réseau Ferée de France. 14 July 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 June 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  22. "L'amenagement des infrastructures existantes". Trains-En-Voyage (in French). 10 August 2007. Archived from the original on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  23. "Catch a TGV from Luxembourg to Strasbourg & Marseille". Luxemburger Wort. 22 March 2016. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  24. DVV Media UK. "LGV Est Phase 2 tendering gets underway". Railway Gazette. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
  25. "LGV Est Phase 2 completed". Railway Gazette. 31 March 2015. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  26. "La ligne à grande vitesse Paris-Strasbourg sera mise en service le 3 juillet". Le Monde.fr (in French). Le Monde. 20 February 2015. Retrieved 21 February 2016.
  27. "LGV Est Phase 2 opening completes Paris – Strasbourg high speed line". Railway Gazette. 4 July 2016.
  28. https://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2020/03/06/tgv-1/
  29. Associated Press (3 April 2007). "French Train Hits 357 MPH Breaking World Speed Record". Fox News. Archived from the original on 4 May 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2007.
  30. "Official 2007 Record Website". Record2007.com. Retrieved 3 April 2007.
  31. "LGV Est Européenne | SNCF Réseau". Lgv-est.com. 31 March 2015. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
  32. "LGV Est Européenne | SNCF Réseau". Lgv-est.com. 31 March 2015. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
  33. "French TGV breaks world speed record". Expatica. 14 February 2007. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  34. "EU allocates TEN-T infrastructure funds". Railway Gazette. 29 October 2009.
  35. "Work starts on LGV Est Phase 2". 19 November 2010. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  36. "Saverne Tunnel holed through on LGV Est". Railway Gazette. 26 February 2013. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  37. Bach, Christian; Poivret, Aurélien (14 November 2015). "Une rame d'essai d'un TGV se renverse et prend feu à Eckwersheim, près de Strasbourg : cinq morts". Dernieres Nouvelles D'Alsace (in French).
  38. Hunderte Reisende mussten ICE auf freier Strecke verlassen. In: Spiegel Online. 16. Mai 2008.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.