détacher la ceinture - definizione. Che cos'è détacher la ceinture
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Cosa (chi) è détacher la ceinture - definizione

RAILWAY LINE
Petite Ceinture; Ligne de la Petite Ceinture; Ligne de Petite Ceinture; Chemin de fer de petite ceinture
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  • The Petite Ceinture railway line passing through the [[Parc Montsouris]]
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  • Paris in 1859 - its Fortifications, pre-1860 limits and the Chemin de fer de (Petite) Ceinture (at this date, only the Rive Droite and Paris-Auteuil sections were built)
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  • alt=Below-grade railroad track, with small building behind a bridge above it in background
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  • Views on Paris's former Petite Ceinture 'Bel-Air' station and rails, undergoing modifications to raise the railway above its former street-level crossings.
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Ceinture         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Petite ceinture; Grande Ceinture; Grande ceinture; Petite ceinture and grande ceinture; Petit Ceinture; Ceinture (disambiguation); Ceintures
The French term ceinture means belt, waist, or ring, and may refer to a ring road or a rail route round a city.
Ceinture         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Petite ceinture; Grande Ceinture; Grande ceinture; Petite ceinture and grande ceinture; Petit Ceinture; Ceinture (disambiguation); Ceintures
·add. ·noun A cincture, girdle, or belt;
- chiefly used in English as a dressmaking term.
Grande ceinture Ouest         
  • Extract from the May 1914 timetables for passenger services on the Grande Ceinture
  • RER line C]]). The Grande Ceinture passes on the second bridge.
  • In the [[Sucy-en-Brie]] stretch, a train is engaged on the "Complémentaire" in the direction of [[Noisy-le-Sec]]. In the background is [[Gare de Sucy - Bonneuil]] on [[RER A]].
  • A freight train in the direction of [[Valenton]] en route to the sheds at [[Villemomble]], now out of use.
  • The station at Bobigny in 1984
Grande Ceinture Ouest; Chemin de fer de Grande Ceinture; La Grande Ceinture; Ligne de la Grande Ceinture; Grande Ceinture de Paris; Ligne de Grande Ceinture
The Grande ceinture Ouest line (French - Ligne Grande ceinture Ouest, or GCO) is a 10 km long section of the Grande Ceinture de Paris, located in Yvelines and reopened to the public on 12 December 2004, after being closed to passengers for 68 years. Managed by the SNCF, it links Saint-Germain-en-Laye (gare de Grande-Ceinture) to Noisy-le-Roi, via Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche.

Wikipedia

Chemin de fer de Petite Ceinture

Paris's former Chemin de fer de Petite Ceinture ('small(er) belt railway'), also colloquially known as La Petite Ceinture, was a circular railway built as a means to supply the city's fortification walls, and as a means of transporting merchandise and passengers between Paris' major rail-company stations. Beginning as two distinct 'Ceinture Syndicate' freight and 'Paris-Auteuil' passenger lines from 1851, these lines formed an arc that surrounded the northern two thirds of Paris, an arc that would become a full circle of rail around the capital when its third Ceinture Rive Gauche section was built in 1867.

Although the Syndicate-owned portion of the line was freight-only in its first years, after the creation of a passenger service from 1862, the Chemin de fer de Ceinture became Paris's first metro-like urban transport, and even more so after the 'Ceinture Rive Gauche' passenger-and-freight section began. The line's passenger service was a popular means of public transport until its 1900 Universal Exposition peak-traffic year.

Paris's first Metro line opened that year: from then, the numbers of those using the Petite Ceinture passenger service dropped steadily until its closure in 1934. Although maintained as a freight line, even this use of the Petite Ceinture had come to a practical standstill by the 1980s.

Since then, sections of the Petite Ceinture's trenches and infrastructure have been recuperated and renovated for the inter-urban RER C passenger transport service, some of its former stations have been sold to local commerce and services. The future of the remaining stretches of Petite Ceinture has always been, and still is, the source of much debate.