Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Network of the Tramway de Versailles around 1920. No line numbers are present on the map due to a change in line letters between 1914 and 1950. Maps of the Network in 1896, 1914 and 1950. The Tramway de Versailles or Tramway Versaillais was a 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) standard gauge tramway system serving the French city of Versailles.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Daily tickets are also available as paper tickets until the end of 2024. Paris Visite is a paper ticket aimed at visitors offering unlimited trips for a duration of one, two, three or five days, for zones 1–3 covering the centre of Paris, or zones 1–5 covering the whole of the network including the RER to the airports, Versailles and ...
The Paris Visite is an all-day ticket aimed at tourists with four periods of validity: one, two, three or five consecutive days. It allows unlimited travel within the chosen zones (1–3 or 1–5) on all modes of transport – except the Filéo at Charles de Gaulle Airport, tourist buses, and Le Bus Direct services.
From 1855 to 1938, Paris was served by an extensive tramway network, predating the Paris Métro by nearly a half-century. [3] In 1925 the network had a 1,111 km (690 mi) length, with 122 lines. [ citation needed ] In the 1930s, the oil and automobile industry lobbies put pressure on the Paris Police Prefecture to remove tram tracks and make ...
Versailles was again the unofficial capital of France from June 1722, when Louis XV returned to Versailles, until October 1789, when a Parisian mob forced Louis XVI and the royal family to move to Paris. Versailles again became the unofficial capital of France from March 1871, when Adolphe Thiers' government took refuge in Versailles, fleeing ...
The Ticket t+ is a single trip ticket for Paris public transit that was introduced in 2007 and that is valid on buses and on the métro and rail systems within Paris. From 2025, it is only available as a paper ticket at the price of €2.50, [ 1 ] and is being replaced by two new types of single tickets available to be loaded onto a reusable ...
Porte de Versailles (French pronunciation: [pɔʁt də vɛʁsɑj]) is a station on line 12 of the Paris Métro, a stop on tramway T3a as well as the southern terminus of tramway T2 in the 15th arrondissement. It is named after the Porte de Versailles, a gate in the 19th century Thiers wall of Paris, which led to the city of Versailles.