Bordeaux-Saint-Jean station

Bordeaux-Saint-Jean or formerly Bordeaux-Midi is the main railway station in the French city of Bordeaux. It is the southern terminus of the Paris–Bordeaux railway, and the western terminus of the Chemins de fer du Midi main line from Toulouse.

Bordeaux Saint-Jean
SNCF and tram
Gare de Bordeaux-Saint-Jean front
LocationRue Charles-Domercq, 33800
Bordeaux
France
Coordinates44.8256°N 0.5556°W / 44.8256; -0.5556
Owned byRFF / SNCF
Line(s)Paris–Bordeaux railway
Bordeaux–Sète railway
Bordeaux–Irun railway
Tracks15
Other information
Station code87581009
History
Opened1898
Passengers
11.5 million
Location
Bordeaux Saint-Jean
Location within Bordeaux

The station building, situated in Bordeaux city centre at the end of the Cours de la Marne, appears from the front as three parts. The middle part is home to the station buffet and separates the arrivals and departures halls. All three parts are parallel to the platforms. The station buildings hide a large metallic trainshed, built by Gustave Eiffel

Since the arrival of the TGV the station has been renovated and upgraded with modern equipment, but has kept its original features.

The great hall has a large map of the network of the Midi on one of the walls and reminds passengers of the origins of the station.

The station is the main railway interchange in Aquitaine and links Bordeaux to Paris, Sète, Toulouse Matabiau and Spain.

History

The station was built in 1855 under the name Gare du Midi (Midi station) by the Chemins de fer du Midi, as the western terminus of its main line linking Bordeaux and Sète. It used to be less important than the former Bordeaux-Bastide station connecting Bordeaux with Paris on the right bank of the river Garonne.[1]

A long metal viaduct, built by Gustave Eiffel in 1860, allowed trains to cross the river and progressively Bordeaux-Saint-Jean became the Bordeaux main station, needing larger infrastructures.

The current station building opened in 1898. As well as Midi trains, trains from the Paris-Orléans and the État companies called there. The station was built by M Toudoire and S Choron. It includes a large metallic trainshed 56 m wide and covers 17,000 m2, one of the largest in Europe, conceived Daidé&Pillé and constructed by G. Eiffel.[1]

Eiffel two-track bridge became a bottleneck, but it was replaced only in 2008 by a new four-track railway bridge next to it, to prepare the St-Pierre-des-Corps-Bordeaux high speed line opening in 2017.[2]

Train services

Current services

The following services call at Bordeaux-Saint-Jean as of January 2018:[3]

^ indicates not all trains stop there

  • High speed services (TGV) Paris - Bordeaux - Dax - Lourdes - Tarbes
  • High speed services (TGV) Paris - Bordeaux - Dax - Bayonne - Biarritz - Hendaye
  • High speed services (TGV) Paris - Bordeaux - Agen - Toulouse
  • High speed services (TGV) Paris - Bordeaux - Arcachon
  • High speed services (TGV) Paris - Tours - Poitiers - Angoulême - Bordeaux
  • High speed services (TGV) Lille - Aéroport CDG - Tours - Bordeaux
  • High speed services (TGV) Strasbourg - Aéroport CDG - Tours - Bordeaux
  • Discount high speed services (Ouigo TGV)

Paris Montparnesse - St-Pierre-des-corps (Tours)^ - Poitiers^ - Angoulême - Bordeaux - Agen - Montaubon - Toulouse

  • Intercity services (Intercités) Bordeaux - Toulouse - Montpellier - Marseille
  • Intercity services (Intercités) Bordeaux - Périgueux - Limoges
  • Intercity services (Intercités) Bordeaux - Périgueux - Brive-la-Gaillarde - Ussel
  • Intercity services (Intercités) Nantes - La Rochelle - Bordeaux
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) (Line 16) Bordeaux - Libourne - Angoulême
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux (Line 24 Direction Limoges and Line 25 Direction Brive) - Libourne - Mussidan - Périgueux
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux (Line 26) - Libourne - Bergerac - Sarlat-la-Canéda
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux (Line 32) - Arcachon
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux (Line 33) - Lesparre - Le Verdon
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux - Morcenx - Mont-de-Marsan
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux - Langon - Marmande - Agen
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux - Dax - Bayonne - Hendaye
  • local service (TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine) Bordeaux - Saintes - La Rochelle

Projected services

Preceding station   SNCF   Following station
Dax
toward Hendaye
TGV
TGVTerminus
Dax
toward Tarbes
TGV
toward Toulouse
TGV
TerminusTGV
toward Strasbourg
Facture-Biganos
toward Arcachon
TGV
TerminusIntercités
TerminusIntercités
toward Limoges
Intercités
toward Ussel
Saint-André-de-Cubzac
toward Nantes
IntercitésTerminus
Cenon
toward La Rochelle
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 6PTerminus
TerminusTER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 16
Cenon
toward Angoulême
Cenon
toward Saintes
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 17Terminus
TerminusTER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 24
Cenon
toward Limoges
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 26
Cenon
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 32
toward Arcachon
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 33
Mérignac-Arlac
toward Le Verdon
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 40
toward Mont-de-Marsan
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 47
toward Agen
TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine 61
toward Hendaye

Twinning

In October 2019, Gare de Bordeaux-Saint-Jean was twinned with London St Pancras International, London, United Kingdom. The association was made in the hope that a high speed service could connect the two stations, and was announced at a ceremony headed by Claude Solard, Director General of SNCF.[5]

See also

  • Gare de Bordeaux État (État)
  • Gare de Bordeaux Passerelle (PO)
  • Gare de Bordeaux Bastide (PO)
  • Gare de Bordeaux Ravezies (ex. Saint-Louis)
  • Gare de Bordeaux Brienne
  • Gare de Bordeaux Bénauge (PO-Midi-Etat)

References

  1. Point, François-Xavier (1998). La gare de Bordeaux Saint-Jean : Histoire d'une centenaire (in French). Éditions Sud-Ouest. ISBN 2-87901-290-2.
  2. "Que va devenir la passerelle Eiffel". 20minutes. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  3. TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine Archived 2019-02-07 at the Wayback Machine, Fiches horaires, accessed 30 January 2018.
  4. "SNCF wants London – Bordeaux by 2022". International Railway Journal.
  5. "London St Pancras twins with Bordeaux Saint-Jean to promote direct service". www.railwaygazette.com. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
  6. "French cooperative targets Bordeaux – Lyon open-access from 2022". International Railway Journal.
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