enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. A10 autoroute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A10_autoroute

    The A10, also called L'Aquitaine, is an Autoroute in France, running for 549 km (341 mi) from the A6 south of Paris to the A630 at Bordeaux. It is the longest motorway in France. It generally parallels the N10 Route Nationale, but deviates significantly from the older N10 between Paris and Tours and between Poitiers and Bordeaux.

  3. A630 autoroute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A630_autoroute

    A630: Bordeaux Ring Road. The A630 autoroute is a motorway in south west France. It is the bypass for Bordeaux, also called Rocade, and forms part of the European routes E5 E70.

  4. Transport in Paris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Paris

    Gare du Nord, one of Paris's seven large mainline railway station termini, is the busiest train station outside Japan. [1] Paris is the centre of a national, and with air travel, international, complex transport system. The modern system has been superimposed on a complex map of streets and wide boulevards that were set in their current routes ...

  5. Route nationale 10 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Route_nationale_10

    The road leaves Bordeaux to the south as the cours Gambetta and crosses the A 630/E 70 at Réjouit and then into heavily wooded countryside of the Landes de Gascogne. The Centre d'études scientifiques et techniques d'Aquitaine , a nuclear weapon research center, is located 4 km north of the village of Le Barp .

  6. A13 autoroute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A13_autoroute

    The motorway starts in Paris at the Porte d'Auteuil, a former gate of the Paris walls, and ends at Mondeville's Mondeville 2 (Porte de Paris) exchange junction on the Boulevard Périphérique (Caen). The A13 is France 's oldest motorway (opening in 1946) and is intensively used between Paris and Normandy for both commuting and holiday makers.

  7. Transport in France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_France

    Travel times by road in Metropolitan France from Paris Two high-speed TGV trains at Paris-Gare de l'Est. Transportation in France relies on one of the densest networks in the world with 146 km of road and 6.2 km of rail lines per 100 km 2. It is built as a web with Paris at its center. [1]

  8. A86 autoroute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A86_autoroute

    It follows an irregular path around Paris with the distance from the city centre varying in the 8–16 kilometres (5.0–9.9 mi) range. The south-western section of A86 contains one of the world's longest urban motorway tunnels (10 km (6.2 mi) of continuous tunnel) known as the Duplex A86 [ fr ] , opened in two parts in 2009 and 2011.

  9. LGV Sud Europe Atlantique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGV_Sud_Europe_Atlantique

    The trip between Paris and Bordeaux takes around two hours and ten minutes at a top speed of 320 km/h (199 mph). The inter-city links between Tours , Poitiers , Angoulême , and Bordeaux are also improved, and southwestern France is better connected to various parts of the country and to the rest of Europe.