Vallorbe railway station
Vallorbe Vallorbe CFF | |
---|---|
The entrance to the station building. | |
Location |
Rue de la Gare 1 CH-1337 Vallorbe Jura-Nord Vaudois, Vaud Switzerland |
Coordinates | 46°42′45″N 06°22′13″E / 46.71250°N 6.37028°ECoordinates: 46°42′45″N 06°22′13″E / 46.71250°N 6.37028°E |
Operated by | SBB CFF FFS |
Line(s) | |
Distance |
46.3 km (28.8 mi) from Lausanne |
Platforms | 3 |
History | |
Opened | 1915 |
Electrified | 1925 |
Location | |
Vallorbe Location within Switzerland |
Vallorbe railway station (French: Gare de Vallorbe) is a station at the border of Switzerland and France on the TGV Lyria line between Paris and Lausanne. It is located at the south-eastern entrance of the tunnel which tunnels one of Jura's mountain ranges, Le Mont d’Or. The station serves the municipality of Vallorbe, in the Canton of Vaud, Switzerland.
Opened in 1915,[1] the station is the south-eastern terminus of the historic French Dijon–Vallorbe railway, and the north-western terminus of the historic Swiss Simplon railway (Vallorbe–Domodossola). It is also the terminal station of the hourly running, suburbain train S2 to Lausanne and further to Palézieux. Finally, it is also a junction for the short line to the south-western end of the Vallée de Joux, also running on an hourly frequency and connects to the historic Chemin de fer Pont-Brassus between Le Pont and Le Brassus, which nowadays is owned by travys (Transports Vallée de Joux - Yverdon-les-Bains - Ste-Croix). The line between Vallorbe and Le Brassus is operated by CFF. The railway station (as well as the line between Vallorbe and Le Pont) is owned and operated by CFF. They are all part of the integrated mobilis (canton of Vaud) fare network.
It is listed as a Swiss heritage site of national significance (class A).[2]
History
When the Simplon Tunnel project in southern Switzerland took shape, a controversy broke out regarding accessing rail lines from other parts of Switzerland. The proposed Faucille project via Geneva gave way to the Mont d'Or tunnel project via Vallorbe.
In 1870, the Swiss railway line from Daillens, the junction station on the Morges-Bussigny-Yverdon railway (opened in 1855), reached the frontier at Vallorbe. In France, the intended connecting line was completed as far as Pontarlier near Vallorbe in 1875. On 31 October 1886, the Jura–Simplon Railway (JS) opened the line between Vallorbe and Le Pont. Its continuation into the Vallée de Joux, the Chemin de fer Pont-Brassus, was built between 1886 (Le Pont) and 1899 (Le Brassus).
In 1915, nine years after the opening of the Simplon Tunnel, the direct Frasne–Lausanne line, including the Vallorbe railway station, was opened in conjunction with the piercing of the Mont d'Or. The doubling of the tracks were completed in 1908, and it was electrified in 1925.[3] Since 1984, the station has also been served by TGV trains.
In its heyday, the station counted up to 250 employees, but that is no longer the case today. Plans affecting the station have been under discussion between the municipality, the canton of Vaud and CFF.[1]
Location
The station is situated on the northwestern edge of the town. Paradoxically, southbound trains from France approach the station from a southwesterly direction, and northbound trains from Lausanne approach from the northeast.
Facilities
Vallorbe railway station has three platforms. As it is a French-Swiss border station with electrified lines, it forms a break of electrification systems. The overhead wires at the station can be switched from one system to the other.
The station was equipped with extensive facilities for freight traffic and a locomotive depot.
Train services
Preceding station | SNCF | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
toward Paris-Lyon | TGV | Terminus |
See also
References
- 1 2 "La gare de Vallorbe et ses fantômes" [Vallorbe railway station and its ghosts]. Le Temps (in French). 21 May 2011. Retrieved 15 November 2011.
- ↑ "Kantonsliste A-Objekte" [Canton list class A]. KGS Inventar (in German). Federal Office of Civil Protection. 2009. Retrieved 25 April 2011. External link in
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(help) - ↑ Zeller, Willy; Trüb, Walter (1977). En train à travers la Suisse [By train through Switzerland] (in French). Zürich, Munich: Ringier. ISBN 3-85859-041-X.
External links
Media related to Vallorbe railway station at Wikimedia Commons
- SBB CFF FFS - official site
This article is based upon a translation of the French-language version as at November 2011.