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The RATP bus network covers the entire territory of the city of Paris and the vast majority of its near suburbs.Operated by the Régie Autonome des Transports Parisiens (RATP), this constitutes a dense bus network complementary to other public transport networks, all organized and financed by Île-de-France Mobilités.
'Metro' has been adopted in many languages, making it the most used word for a (generally underground) urban transit system. The Métro is operated by the Régie autonome des transports parisiens (RATP), a public transport authority that also operates part of the RER network, light rail lines and many bus routes.
The complete RATP bus network, in the city of Paris and its suburbs, including Noctilien night buses (except a small number of "long-distance" lines for which 2 tickets t+ need to be validated) Most of the Optile bus network, a union of the private operators of bus lines in Paris outer suburbs. The Montmartre funicular
The Grand Paris Express is a project consisting of new rapid transit lines and the extension of existing lines being built in the Île-de-France region of France. The project comprises four new lines for the Paris Métro , plus extensions of the existing Lines 11 and 14 .
The Trans-Val-de-Marne, often abbreviated as Tvm, is a bus rapid transit (BRT) line operated by the RATP Group as part of the RATP bus network in the Paris metropolitan area. The line entered service on 1 October 1993, running almost entirely in a dedicated lane .
Unlike a ticket t+, users can transfer from the métro/RER to the bus/tram network (or vice versa) within 90 minutes (bus/tram) or 2 hours (Metro/train/RER) without paying a second fare (if transfering to or from the Metro/train/RER systen, it is the tarif of that system, €1.99, that applies). [3]
The embryonic (and as yet unnamed) RER was not properly conceived until the 1965 Schéma directeur d'aménagement et d'urbanisme (roughly: "master plan for urban development"), which envisioned an H-shaped network with two north-south routes. [14] Between 1969 and 1970, RATP purchased the Vincennes and Saint-Germain lines from SNCF, as the ...
The following is a list of all stations of the Paris Métro. As of the end of January 2025, there are a total of 321 stations on 16 different lines. Introductory notes