Trams in Besançon

Trams in Besançon

A tram in the Main Street (Grand Rue) of Besançon (post card 1905)

A tram at the Battant tram stop in Besançon (2015)

The Besançon tram network in 2014
Overview
Locale Besançon, Doubs, France
Transit type Tram network
Number of lines 2 (2014)
Number of stations 31 (2014)
Operation
Began operation 1896 (narrow gauge electric trams)
2014 (standard gauge electric trams)
Ended operation 1952 (narrow gauge electric trams)
Operator(s) Société des Tramways électriques de Besançon (TEB) 1896-1912
Compagnie Franco-Belge (1912-1952)
Ginko (since 2014)
Number of vehicles 19 (1900-1913)
19 (since 2014)
Technical
System length 11 km (6.8 mi) (1903)
14.5 km (9.0 mi) (2014)
Track gauge one-meter (1896-1952)
Standard gauge (since 2014)
Electrification 750 V DC (2014)
Average speed 20 km/h
Top speed 70 km/h

The Besançon Tram network dated back to a horse tram service inaugurated in 1887. The first two electric tram lines began operating in 1897, joined later by (probably four) more. However, the system, which used only single tracks for its two lines, was badly damaged during the Second World War from which its finances also emerged in a parlous condition. In 1952, the operation having run out of funding possibilities, the Besançon trams were withdrawn: a city bus service was inaugurated in December 1952.[1]

Following a widely endorsed decision by the city authorities taken in 2005,[2] a new publicly financed two route tram network opened, formally at the end of August 2014, serving the now much enlarged Besançon conglomeration. Although officially organised into two routes, for most of their length the two routes operate on the same track. Another line is scheduled to enter service in 2025.

History

Background

Besançon had been linked to Dôle by rail since 7 April 1856, and since 1 June 1858 also to Belfort following completion of the line along this part of the Doubs valley. The railway station of Besançon-Viotte was located on the north side of the city, however, some distance from the historic city centre. It became a railway junction with the opening on 22 July 1872 of a line to the Swiss frontier at Le Locle.[3] This led to the opening in 1884 of a second station, at Besançon-Mouillère. This monumental structure was located in the eastern part of the city, close to the river.

By the 1880s the population of the city had reached 50,000, and the first public transport service was inaugurated on 3 December 1887. It was commissioned by a man called Charvolin and it connected the station of Besançon-Viotte with the quarter of Tarragnoz, at one edge of the topographically challenging city centre. The route was served by omnibuses and traction was provided by horses. The omnibuses, known as "Rippert coaches" ("Cars Rippert"), featured open platforms at each end. The route was extended to the "Fountain of Flora" ("Fontaine de Flore") in 1893. Surviving archives include complaints about the trams being overcrowded, suggesting that in commercial terms this mode of transport enjoyed some success.[3][4]

Electric trams

1894-1952

In 1894 Alexandre Grammont, an entrepreneurial industrialist, and Edmond Faye, an entrepreneurial banker, applied for a concession to create an electric tram network. A lengthy period of deliberation and negotiation followed. The installation of tramlines would require holes to be made in Besançon's formidable and, in many parts, ancient city fortifications. However, on 26 February 1896 an agreement was signed for the construction of six single-track tram lines, using a one metre gauge, and incorporating sufficient passing places. The city's topography called for some sharp turns, several with a radius of only 17 meters, and a number of dauntingly steep slopes. The operating company was to be called the "Besançon Electric Tramway Company" ("Société des Tramways électriques de Besançon" / TEB)

The network was formally endorsed by the authorities on 6 May 1896 which was also when the first stretch of line opened, connecting the city hall with the tram depot in the Rue Isenbart. Lines 1 and 2 entered service on 21 March 1897, operating respectively along the route from the station of Besançon-Viotte to the prefecture, and from the station of Besançon-Viotte to the Rivotte Gate (Porte Rivotte). For 18 April 1897 Line 1 was extended from the prefecture to Tarragnoz and Chaprais. On 27 May 1897 an extension of Line 2 opened from Besançon-Viotte to Sainte-Claude, while Line 1 gained a further extension from Chaprais, across the Canot Bridge ("Pont Canot") to Place Jouffroy. Further extensions followed during the next few years.

In 1903 a new line was agreed, which would connect Besançon (Place Saint-Pierre) and Saint-Ferjeux, then located just outside the city to its west.[5] The TEB also obtained from the authorities consent for the withdrawal of certain loss making services and practical support for the construction of the new line. Line completion, later the same year left the city with a total tram network length of 11 km (6.8 mi).[1]

In 1912 the Compagnie Franco-Belge, which was already running 27 other city tram networks, took over the running of the TEB. Besançon's nineteen tramcars were replaced, and in 1913 the Bregille Funicular was opened.

Local narrow-gauge railways

Early in the second decade of the twentieth century Besançon also acquired two narrow gauge local steam railway services. One of these, operated by the Compagnie des chemins de fer du Doubs and opened in 1910, was a 29 km (18 mi) service to Amathay-Vésigneux and Pontarlier. The other, opened in 2011, was operated by the Chemins de fer vicinaux de Haute-Saône, servicing a line towards Vesoul. The first of these routes continued in operation till 1951, while the second of them ceased operations in 1938, an early victim of competition from motor buses.[3][4]

More war

The Second World War broke out, for France, in 1939, and involved a German invasion in May/June 1940. On 16 June 1940, in order to try and hold back the German attack, all the bridges crossing the Doubs River were destroyed, which permanently amputated a large part of the Besançon tram network. During the period of relative affluence that followed the German invasion part of the transport deficit was made up for using motor buses, but fuel for civilian use was in increasingly short supply and in 1942 the buses were requisitioned by the Germans in order to transport French citizens from the affected regions to Germany for Forced Labour Service. A fire bomb in April 1943 destroyed the bus depot and the maintenance tools and equipment, and on 16 July 0f the same year the tram depot was destroyed in an air raid.

The war ended in May 1945, which found public transport provision in Besançon a pale shadow of its 1930s self. In 1947 the company, which was already facing financial catastrophe, was required by government decree to lower fares. 1948 saw a complete reorganisation. In 1952 buses returned to the streets, and their arrival was accompanied, on 24 December 1952, by the ending of operations on the tram network, which had simply run out of resources.

Electric trams return 2014

Network

The line length is 14.5 km (9.0 mi) and it serves 31 tram halts. The Hauts-de-Chazal quarter is linked to Chaprais via the city centre. Alternate trams travel not to Chaprais, but instead follow a short branch line to Besançon-Viotte station.[6] There are five park-and-ride car parks served, which together offer parking for 630 cars. There is talk of increasing car parking capacity to 1030.[7] A southern extension to the existing line is envisioned, and a new line, planned for 2025, is to link Chalezeule with the Technology Park to the west of Besançon-Viotte.

Finance

The capital cost of the first line was estimated at €228 million, equivalent to a cost of €16 million per kilometer. 50% of the funding comes from a loan and a further 25% from subsidies. €20 million of those subsidies were provided by the city and a further €30 million from national the government (Environment forum). The balancing 25% comes from a variety of other reserves. The costs have been minimised by consciously avoiding complexity at the design stage and using standard tramcars without requiring a succession of adaptations to "meet local requirements".

Infrastructure

The new network uses a 750 V direct current overhead power supply and a standard gauge. The standard gauge was chosen, despite the topographical challenges presented by the city, in order to be ready for some possible future tram-train project that might involve integrating a recreated local train network into the city tram system. Almost the entire length of the line uses a twin track except for a short section between the Schweitzer and Lilas tram halts. On a few other short sections the trams share the street with other road traffic.[8]

The new line crosses the river four times, and required a rebuild for the Battant Bridge ("Pont Battant"). A large depot, covering 47,000 m², was scheduled for completion in 2014 at Franois, at the western end of the line. Trams are to be kept out of doors, but a large covered workshop covering 6,500 m² is scheduled to become fully operational in 2015.[9]

Scale

The network is designed to take 50,000 passengers daily, with an expected level of 47,000 from the start.[10] At peak hours 1,200 are expected to use the trams each hour, and during periods of maximum demand the trams will be scheduled to run at intervals of five minutes.

The tram is to be operational daily from 05.00 hrs to 01.00 hrs the following morning. The average speed is 20 km/h with a maximum speed of 70 km/h. Commissioning of the trams was accompanied by an extensive reconfiguring of the Besançon bus network, all under the control of "Ginko", the city's public transportation provider.

Tramcars

Following a tendering process, the Spanish tram manufacturer CAF won the contract to provide and maintain 19 low floor Urbos 3 tramsets. The contract value was €34.4 million, equivalent to €1.81 million per tram. The first tram was delivered in June 2013, and subjected to a range of tests. In order to obtain and type operating certificate, the first tram was required to complete 10,000 test kilometres, which was expected to have been completed by July 2014.[10] Driver training started in January 2014 and all the trams had been delivered to Besançon by March 2014. The individual trams were required to complete 500 km each before being certificated for public service.[10]

Each tramset is 23 m (75 ft) long and 2.4 m (94 in) wide, with space for 132 passengers. Only 38 of the passengers are able to sit on a seat, however. Each tram has four sets of access/exit doors. The possibility exists of lengthening each tram with an additional one or two middle sections. The first tram was built at the manufacturer's facility in Zaragoza. The rest of them were scheduled to be assembled in France by Soulé.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 R. Hingray; et al. (2 March 2010). "Le tram est déjà passé par Besançon". Besac. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  2. "Le Grand Besançon innove en choisissant un tramway optimisé (press conference handout)" (PDF). "Le Grand Besançon". 19 December 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 André Jacquot, « Les anciens tramways de Besançon », Connaissance du rail, no 354-355, octobre-novembre 2010, p. 15-21 (ISSN 0222-4844)
  4. 1 2 Jacques Chapuis, « Les tramways électriques de Besançon », Chemins de fer régionaux et urbains, vol. 1990-VI, no 222, 1990, p. 3-20
  5. "Décret du 17 novembre 1903 déclarant d'utilité publique, dans le département du Doubs, des travaux d'établissement d'un tramway entre Besançon et Saint-Ferjeux". Bulletin des lois. 68 / 2517. 14 May 1904. pp. 1251–1254. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  6. "Besançon including some future plans" (PDF). Grand Besançon. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  7. 1 2 Pierre Bazin: Besançon prend le tram. In: Connaissance du rail. Nr. 354-355, 2010, ISSN 0222-4844, p. 6-12.
  8. "Tramway : les réponses à vos questions" (PDF). Besançon, votre ville. 2010. pp. 13–15. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  9. "Le Centre de maintenance du tram" (PDF). 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  10. 1 2 3 "Tramway : premiers essais à Besançon" (in French). La vie du rail, Paris. 10 October 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
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