One thing I wanted to see while we were in Lyon in July was the funicular
underground railway. The railways were built to carry goods and passengers up
the incredibly steep cliffs that suround old Lyon and are very early - the
first was built in 1862. They start at ground level and climb a very steep
ramp to enter the tunnel. For the people of Lyon that may be normal, but for
me...
There were once five funicular lines, but only two exist now,
a line climbing the Fourvière hill linking Saint-Jean to Saint-Just with an intermediate station at
Minimes, and a line from Saint-Jean to the
Basilica. Both lines were modernised in 1986 and 1987. A new station at
Saint-Jean was built in 1991 to serve a new line of the Metro and both
funicular lines, and the whole complex named Vieux-Lyon. The Fourvière
funicular was refurbished at the start of 2018, and the St Just funicular at
the start of 2019.
We rode on the line up to the Basilica. It isn't very long, only 404 metres (1,325 ft), but it climbs 116 metres (381 ft). There's only 2 stops, one at each end, and two cars. They balance each other out, so it's actually quite an efficient mode of transport. Each car carries 70 passengers, and the journey takes 2 minutes.
That's the facts, now for the pictures:
The train is at the station
The funicular crosses a bridge to enter the tunnel
1 comment:
Wow! I need to see that, ride that. Thanks!
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