Noisy–Champs station

Noisy–Champs is a railway station on the RER train network at the border between Champs-sur-Marne, Seine-et-Marne and Noisy-le-Grand, Seine-Saint-Denis, France.

Noisy–Champs
Champy–Nesles
RER station
North entrance of the station, Descartes side
LocationFrance
Coordinates48.8429°N 2.58°E / 48.8429; 2.58
Owned byRATP Group
Operated byRATP Group
Line(s)
  
Platforms2
Tracks2
Other information
Station code8775834
Fare zone4
History
Opened19 December 1980 (1980-12-19)
Traffic
Passengers (2015)4,433,525
Services
Preceding station   RER   Following station
Noisy-le-Grand – Mont d'Est
toward Cergy-le-Haut
Noisiel
toward Marne-la-Vallée – Chessy

Description

The station opened on 19 December 1980, when RER Line A was extended to Torcy.[1] It serves the Descartes Campus of the University of Eastern Paris – Marne-la-Vallée (French: Université Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée). Bus stations are on both ends of platforms: Archimède is on Noisy-le-Grand side, Descartes on the Champs-sur-Marne side.

Transport

Train

The average frequency is one train every 10 minutes to Paris and to Marne-la-Vallée–Chessy (some trains terminate at Torcy).

Bus

Noisy–Champs RER–Descartes is served by RATP Group bus lines 212 (to Emerainville), 213 (to Chelles and Lognes) and 312 (circular line serving the campus and its vicinities).

Noisy–Champs RER–Archimède is served by RATP bus lines 310 (to Les Yvris–Noisy-le-Grand) and 320 (circular line serving other stations in Noisy-le-Grand).

The station is also served by Noctilien night line N130 to Paris and Marne-la-Vallée–Chessy, and by CIF line 100 to Torcy and Créteil.[2]

Metro

Paris Métro Line 11 is expected to be extended to Noisy–Champs. This station should be the terminus of the future lines 15 and 16.[3][4]

gollark: (but doesn't lead directly to much faster computers because Dennard scaling is dead)
gollark: Intel isn't the only company making microprocessors ever, the trend apparently still holds.
gollark: Since most people handwave that kind of issue anyway, I assume the main practical issues are just ickiness-related.
gollark: There are some reasonable arguments regarding animal welfare. While IIRC the insect meat is more energy-dense, insects are small so you need lots more insects to get some amount of energy than you would for, say, sheep. Most people would rank each insect as less important/worthy-of-moral-consideration than the sheep, but potentially not *enough* lower that it's equal/better given the large number.
gollark: It's not like they have spikes/thorns and poisons just for decoration.

References

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