"La 'Ligne de Sceaux'" (The Sceaux Line) was a railway line in
France running from
Paris to some of its southern suburbs, including
Sceaux from which it takes its name. It is now part of the
RATP's
RER line B, though the name is still used informally.
The line originally opened in
1846, built under the supervision of chief engineer
Jean-Claude Arnoux. It ran from a Paris terminal near the present-day
metro station of
Denfert Rochereau through
Bourg-la-Reine - where a branch to
Robinson via
Sceaux (actually the original main line of 1846) originates -
Massy Palaiseau (present-day
TGV connection), and
Saint Rémy-les-Chevreuse to
Limours. Plans to extend it to
Chartres never bore fruit, as competing lines made the project superfluous.
It was originally built with very tight bends in the area around Sceaux: Arnoux had devised a new system that allowed train wheels to turn, and the line was to test his prototypes. Shortly after opening, the
bogie was invented in the
USA, rendering Arnoux's system pointlessly complicated. The section of track from Bourg-La-Reine to Sceaux was rebuilt to the current terminus of Robinson.
For much of its history, the line operated in splendid isolation from other railways. Most notably, the line was extended from its original Denfert terminus further into Paris to a terminus station built underground at
Luxembourg between 1889 and 1895. Perhaps because of this deep penetration into the city center, the line was acquired by the ''Chemin de Fer Métropolitain de Paris'' (CMP) (see
Paris Metro) in 1937.
The CMP immediately proceeded to upgrade its new property, electrifying it with an
overhead system down to Saint Rémy-les-Chevreuse in 1938. The outlying section to Limours, where traffic was minimal, was never electrified and closed to passengers on
May 15,
1939. From this time on it was generally considered as a metro line, even though it ran on different
gauge and with different rolling stock. Maps of the metro network show it along with the numbered lines with an 'S'.
The line was operated as a separate division of the CMP and its descendant
RATP, with dedicated rolling stock (other CMP lines used third-rail electrification), until 1977, when it was incorporated into the
RER as the southern part of its new line B.
References
★ Gaillard, M. (1991). ''Du Madeleine-Bastille à Météor: Histoire des transports Parisiens,'' Amiens: Martelle. ISBN 2-87890-013-8. (''French'')
External links
★
Histoire du RER, the RER history.
★
La ligne de Sceaux oubliée : a brief history of "la ligne de Sceaux", both the main section and the abandoned one from
Saint-Rémy-lès-Chevreuse to
Limours.