
Gare Saint-Lazare West entrance.
'Gare Saint-Lazare' is one of the six large terminus
train stations of
Paris. It is the second busiest behind the
Gare du Nord.
The first station at St Lazare was 200
m north-west of its current position, called 'Embarcadère des Batignolles'. The station was opened by
Marie-Amélie (wife of
Louis-Philippe, King of the French) on
24 August 1837. The first line served was the single track line to
St Germain-en-Laye.
In
1843 St-Lazare was the terminus for three lines; by
1900 this number had tripled.
The station had 14 platforms in
1854 after several enlargements, and now has 27 platforms sorted in six destination groups.
On
27 April 1924 the inner suburban lines were electrified with 750
V third rail. The same lines were re-electrified at 25
kV overhead wires in the
1960s.
Réseau Saint-Lazare
''For more information on Réseau Saint-Lazare, see
main article.''

Regional train at Saint Lazare.

Intercity train at Saint Lazare.
Suburban (ÃŽle de France / Transilien)
''For more information on Transilien, see
main article.''
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Argenteuil
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Bécon-les-Bruyères
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Boissy l'Aillerie
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Bueil
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Cergy-le-Haut
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Conflans-Sainte-Honorine
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Cormeilles-en-Parisis
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Ermont-Eaubonne
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Gaillon-Aubevoye
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Gisors-Embranchement
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Maisons-Laffitte
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Mantes-la-Jolie
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Marly-le-Roi
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Les Mureaux
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Nanterre-Université
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Oissel
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Pontoise
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Saint-Cloud
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche-Forêt-de-Marly
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Le Stade
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Val-de-Reuil
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Vernon
★ SNCF Gare Saint-Lazare -
Versailles-Rive-Droite
Inter City (Grandes Lignes)
The following SNCF ''Grandes Lignes''
intercity train services operate out of Saint-Lazare:
★ Gare Saint-Lazare -
Vernon - Rouen-Rive-Droite -
Le Havre
★ Gare Saint-Lazare - Évreux-Normandie -
Lisieux -
Caen -
Cherbourg
★ Gare Saint-Lazare -
Évreux-Normandie - Lisieux -
Trouville-Deauville
★ Gare Saint-Lazare - Rouen-Rive-Droite-
Dieppe
Nearby stations
★
Saint-Lazare Métro station
★
Haussmann-Saint-Lazare RER station
★
Saint-Augustin Métro station
★
Europe Métro station
★
Havre-Caumartin Métro station
Gare Saint-Lazare in art and literature

Claude Monet: ''Gare Saint-Lazare'', 1877
The Gare Saint-Lazare has been represented in a number of artworks. It attracted artists during the Impressionist period and many of them lived very close to the Gare St-Lazare during the 1870s and 1880s.
Édouard Manet lived close by, at 4 rue de Saint-Pétersbourg. Two years after moving to the area he showed his painting "Le Chemin de Fer" at the Paris Salon in 1874. This painting,
[1], now in the National Gallery of Art at Washington D.C., portrays a woman with a small dog and a book as she sits facing us in front of an iron fence, while a young girl to her right views the railroad track and steam beyond it. It was painted from the backyard of a friend's house on the nearby rue de Rome. At the time of its first exhibition it was caricatured and the subject of ridicule.
[2] and
[3]
Gustave Caillebotte also lived just a short walk away from the station. He painted ''Le Pont de l’Europe'' (The Bridge of Europe) in 1876 (now in the Petit Palais, Musée d’Art Moderne in Geneva, Switzerland) and "On the Pont de l'Europe" in 1876-80 (Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth). The former picture looks across the bridge with the ironworks diagonally crossing the picture to the right with a scene of partially interacting figures on the bridge to the left of it, and the latter depicts the iron structure of the bridge face-on in a strong close-up of its industrial geometry, with three male figures to the left side of the painting, all looking in different directions. (The Pont de l'Europe is a massive bridge spanning the railyard of the newly-expanded station, which at that time had an iron-work trellis)
[4]
In 1877, painter
Claude Monet rented a studio near the Gare Saint-Lazare. That same year he exhibited seven paintings of the railway station in an impressionist painting exhibition. He completed 11 paintings of this subject.
[5],
[6] and
[7]
Lesser-known artists who depicted the Gare Saint-Lazare were
Jean Béraud, who painted "The Place and Pont de
l'Europe" in 1876-78
[8] and
Norbert Goeneutte (1854-1894), with a studio providing a very good view of the Pont de l'Europe, who painted this scene many times in the late 1880s. One of these is "The Pont de l'Europe and Gare Saint-Lazare" from ca. 1888 (in the Baltimore Museum).
[9]

St-Lazare station from the Pont de l'Europe
An engraving showing the Place de l'Europe bridge at the time of its opening in 1868 was made by
Auguste Lamy.
[10]
In 1998 the
Musée D'Orsay and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., put on an exhibition called "Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare"
[11].
The Gare Saint-Lazare is mentioned or plays a role in
Emile Zola's ''La bête humaine'' and
Roland Sadaune's ''Terminus St-Lazare''.
The Gare Saint-Lazare is seen in the 1995 film
French Kiss with
Kevin Kline and
Meg Ryan. It is the last scene in Paris where Kevin Kline's character is being chased by Police Inspector Jean-Paul Cardon (
Jean Reno) while trying to board a train south to
Cannes.
See also
★
List of stations of the Paris RER
★
List of stations of the Paris Métro
★
Gare d'Austerlitz
★
Gare de l'Est
★
Gare de Lyon
★
Gare Montparnasse
★
Gare du Nord
References
★ "Manet, Monet, and the Gare Saint-Lazare" by Juliet Wilson-Bareau.
External link
★
Satellite image from Google Maps