Skip to main content

TEN-T funds modernise French rail line

A section of French rail network from Mulhouse to Chalampé on the German border has been inaugurated to passenger traffic as part of a European Union supported project. The TEN-T funded project involves a 17.5 km section of French single-track rail infrastructure; the modernised section, supported by US$903,000 of EU funds, will allow faster connections to and from Mülheim in Germany. The project contributes to the TEN-T Priority Project 24 Lyon/Genova-Basel-Duisburg-Rotterdam/Antwerp railway axis, an esse
December 10, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A section of French rail network from Mulhouse to Chalampé on the German border has been inaugurated to passenger traffic as part of a 1816 European Union supported project.

The TEN-T funded project involves a 17.5 km section of French single-track rail infrastructure; the modernised section, supported by US$903,000 of EU funds, will allow faster connections to and from Mülheim in Germany.  The project contributes to the TEN-T Priority Project 24 Lyon/Genova-Basel-Duisburg-Rotterdam/Antwerp railway axis, an essential step in linking the German and French networks on the Rotterdam/Duisburg-Lyon corridor.

This section will be opened to commercial passenger traffic for the first time in over 30 years, having previously only been used for freight services.

The project consisted of various works aimed at modernising the rail section, notably:

• Upgrading of the line’s signalling equipment
• Strengthening of the track foundations by replacing the ballast to enable continuous speeds of up to 90 km/h
• Automation of three level crossings

On completion of the ancillary works in December 2012, travelling times on the section will be reduced by 10 minutes and speed will be increased from 70 to 90 km/h, thus rendering rail more competitive against other less energy-efficient transport modes.  From August 2013 high speed trains between Paris, Lyon or Marseille and Barcelona in the Mediterranean region will be able to use this part of rail infrastructure to transit through to Freiburg-im-Breisgau in Germany.

The 6998 TEN-T Executive Agency (TEN-T EA), which has managed the project from its start, and the 1690 European Commission welcomes the inauguration as an important milestone for rail transport in the EU.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Maryland to implement positive train control
    January 13, 2014
    In the wake of the December derailment of a New York passenger train that came off the tracks as it sped too fast into a turn, the Maryland Board of Public Works has approved a US$13 million contract to begin installing positive train control equipment, which uses GPS and radio signalling to react automatically if a collision or derailment is anticipated.
  • Upgrading rail signalling systems in an urban environment: lessons from Europe
    October 13, 2015
    WSP/Parsons Brinckerhoff has launched a series of technical forums with European rail specialists in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Auckland. Its Swedish director Mats Önner and senior consultant Michael Fransson will share their knowledge and experience of upgrading signalling infrastructure on railways throughout Sweden, Norway and Denmark.
  • Astaldi wins rail upgrade contract in Poland
    June 28, 2017
    The Italian Astaldi Group has been awarded the contract by Polskie Linie Kolejowe (PKP) to upgrade a section of the E-59 Warsaw-Poznań railway line (Lot IV).
  • EU-wide Railway at low level status of deployment
    October 6, 2017
    Deployment of the European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS), an EU-wide railway signalling system is proceeding at a very low-level, according to a new report from European Court of Auditors. In assessing if the ERTMS had been proper planned, deployed and managed, the auditors visited Denmark, Germany, Spain, Italy, Poland and the Netherlands and detected a reluctance from infrastructure managers to invest in the necessary equipment due the expense and a lack individual business cases.