Transport in Montpellier
Montpellier is a city in Hérault, France. The city is located 750 kilometres (470 mi) south of Paris, on the Mediterranean Sea. The city has a population of 255,080 and is the 8th largest city in France.
Urban transport
Tram
Montpellier has 4 tram routes, serving large parts of the city. The first line opened in 2000 and there is now a network of 63 km (2012). All 4 routes serve Montpellier-Saint-Roch railway station.
- 1 (Mosson - Hospital Lapeyronie - University - City Centre - Odysseum)
- 2 (Saint-Jean de Vedas - Villeneuve d'Angoulême - City Centre - Castelnau-le-Lez - Jacou)
- 3 (Juvignac - Mosson - City Centre - Boirargues - Lattes / Perols-Etang de l'Or)
- 4 (City Centre Service: Place Albert 1er - Saint-Denis)
A fifth tram route is planned from Clapiers - City Centre - Paul Fajon - Laverune, to open in 2017.
Cycling
Vélomagg' (from Vélos Montpellier Agglomeration) is a bike sharing scheme in Montpellier, France launched in June 2007, engineered by Smoove. This community bicycle program comprises 750 bicycles and 59 stations for short and long term renting, optionally coupled with tramway, bus and car sharing services.[1][2] Individual bicycles can park in secured parking lots linked to the system, equipped with electrical public pumps. The bicycles are secured by electronic locks operated by RFID client smart card or keyboard. The system is reliable and appreciated,[3][4] the bicycles are relatively cheap, sturdy and light.[5][6] Contrary to most other such programs, it is not linked to an advertising deal.[7]
- Now in Orange
- Secured bicycle parks
- Bicycles are redispatched by electric vans
- A Vélomagg' station
Longer distance transport
Car
Montpellier lies on the A9 Motorway (Orange - Spanish Border - Barcelona). Lyon, Paris, Clermont-Ferrand, Marseille, Nice, Toulouse and Bordeaux are all accessible by Motorway from Montpellier.
Rail
Montpellier-Saint-Roch railway station is the main station, located in the city centre. The station is served by trains to major cities such as Paris, Angers, Avignon, Béziers, Bordeaux, Dijon, Le Mans, Lille, Lyon, Marseille, Nantes, Narbonne, Nice, Nîmes, Perpignan, Rennes and Toulouse. International services operate to Barcelona and Madrid in Spain and Brussels in Belgium.
There are plans to construct a high-speed railway linking Nîmes and Montpellier with the LGV Méditerranée.[8]
Train services are operated by SNCF.
Air
Montpellier – Méditerranée Airport is located 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) south-east of the city, in the area of Fréjorgues. Marseille Provence Airport is 150 kilometres (93 mi) away, which offers more international flights. Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport and Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport can both be reached by public transport from Montpellier. Paris-CDG airport has a number of direct TGV train services from Montpellier.
References
- European Conference on Mobility Management London 2008 Vélomagg' address 12:30 05/06/2008
- L'internaute magazine «150 bikes by the beach».
- Midi Libre Archived 2009-06-13 at the Wayback Machine (a major daily newspaper in the South of France): «In 2008, 76 000 clients and 800 000 travels have been registered in Montpellier. A success, and few vandalism compared to the Velib in Paris.»
- Tous à Vélo Archived 2015-09-12 at the Wayback Machine AFP 19/10/2007: «Paris, Orléans and Montpellier receive the "Bicycle Trophy 2007" for their achievement in Bike Sharing programs».
- Harmonie Archived 2008-10-05 at the Wayback Machine Montpellier Agglomération n° 255 Oct 2008; Harmonie Archived 2008-08-03 at the Wayback Machine n° 251 Mai 2008: «The average annual cost of a Vélomagg' is around 700€ to be compared with 2000-3000€ in average for other similar systems.»
- Montpellier journal «The bicycle weights 5kg less than the Parisian Vélib'» «You can cycle 12h for 0,25€.»
- CityRyde: «There are several vendors with bike share programs that are not based primarily on advertising revenue, including CityByke, Public Bike Systems, B-cycle, and Smoove amongst others.»
- "Railway Gazette: Southern LGV projects make progress". Retrieved 14 February 2011.
External links
- TaM Official site (French)