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Marcus Fox November 6th 03 05:48 PM

OT - Paris Metro...
 
I know all about the Underground, or at least a lot about it, with regards
to zones and travelcards, and the most economical way of getting from A to
B. Is there such a site that explains the same for the Paris Metro,
preferably in English?

Marcus



Paul Corfield November 6th 03 07:39 PM

OT - Paris Metro...
 
On Thu, 6 Nov 2003 18:48:05 -0000, "Marcus Fox"
wrote:

I know all about the Underground, or at least a lot about it, with regards
to zones and travelcards, and the most economical way of getting from A to
B. Is there such a site that explains the same for the Paris Metro,
preferably in English?


http://www.ratp.fr/ and select English as the language option.
--
Paul C
Admits to Working for London Underground!

Oliver Keating November 7th 03 08:21 AM

OT - Paris Metro...
 

"Marcus Fox" wrote in
message ...
I know all about the Underground, or at least a lot about it, with regards
to zones and travelcards, and the most economical way of getting from A to
B. Is there such a site that explains the same for the Paris Metro,
preferably in English?


What do you need to know?

The metro has a fare system very similar to LU, with zones (I think there
are about 6). Unlike LU, most of the *metro* is confined to zone 1 (which is
clearly identified on all metro maps). However, the RER forms a much larger
Paris-wide network where the other zones come into play.

AFAIK they don't have travelcards, but at 60p a journey, it isn't exactly
expensive.

Marcus




Paul Corfield November 7th 03 07:13 PM

OT - Paris Metro...
 
On Fri, 7 Nov 2003 09:21:11 -0000, "Oliver Keating"
wrote:


"Marcus Fox" wrote in
message ...
I know all about the Underground, or at least a lot about it, with regards
to zones and travelcards, and the most economical way of getting from A to
B. Is there such a site that explains the same for the Paris Metro,
preferably in English?


What do you need to know?

The metro has a fare system very similar to LU, with zones (I think there
are about 6). Unlike LU, most of the *metro* is confined to zone 1 (which is
clearly identified on all metro maps). However, the RER forms a much larger
Paris-wide network where the other zones come into play.


8 zones IIRC but as you say they stretch a long way out from Paris.

AFAIK they don't have travelcards, but at 60p a journey, it isn't exactly
expensive.


Yes they do.

Weekly or monthly Carte Orange

Mobilis is the One Day Card - you get an ID card (no photo) which you
sign. It has a serial number. You can then buy your Mobilis in advance
and write the date of validity and serial number on when you want to
travel. I use a Mobilis every time I go to Paris.

Paris Visite is the equivalent of the Tourist Travelcard and can be
bought at the Waterloo Eurostar terminal. Also offers discounts on
museums etc.
--
Paul C
Admits to Working for London Underground!

Mark Brader November 7th 03 09:41 PM

OT - Paris Metro...
 
Oliver Keating:
The metro has a fare system very similar to LU, with zones (I think there
are about 6). Unlike LU, most of the *metro* is confined to zone 1 (which is
clearly identified on all metro maps). However, the RER forms a much larger
Paris-wide network where the other zones come into play.


Also, the Metro is flat-fare for the whole system. Zone 1 is the whole
city of Paris, but where the Metro does go outside of it, the regular
fare still applies. This means that for places like La Defense (zone 3)
that you can reach from Paris by either Metro or RER, the RER may be
faster but the Metro is cheaper. I remember that some years ago that
particular trip was about 5 francs by Metro, 10 francs by RER second
class, or 15 by RER first class (since abolished).

Within Paris, of course, the same fare applies to both Metro and RER,
and you can transfer between them on a single ticket.
--
Mark Brader, Toronto | Do not meddle in the affairs of undefined behavior,
| for it is subtle and quick to anger.

My text in this article is in the public domain.

Clive D. W. Feather November 8th 03 04:07 PM

OT - Paris Metro...
 
In article , Oliver Keating
writes
The metro has a fare system very similar to LU, with zones (I think there
are about 6). Unlike LU, most of the *metro* is confined to zone 1 (which is
clearly identified on all metro maps). However, the RER forms a much larger
Paris-wide network where the other zones come into play.


*All* the metro is in zone 1, even when it serves stations in other
zones. That is, you can use a zone-1-only ticket to take line 1 from
Etoile to La Defence, even though the latter is in zone 2 or 3 (I forget
which). You can't, however, take a line A RER train for the same journey
using that ticket; you need a more expensive one.

--
Clive D.W. Feather, writing for himself | Home:
Tel: +44 20 8371 1138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org
Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work:
Written on my laptop; please observe the Reply-To address


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