Soléa

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Soléa
TypePrivate
IndustryPublic transport
HeadquartersMulhouse
Number of employees
544
Websitewww.solea.info
Alstom Citadis 302 tram operated by Soléa on its urban tram routes
Heuliez GX 327 bus operated by Soléa

Soléa is a public transport operator in the French city of Mulhouse. Under contract to the Mulhouse Alsace Agglomération, it operates the city's bus network and three of the lines of the city's tram network. It also jointly operates, with the French national rail operator SNCF, the city's fourth tram line, a tram-train service.

Soléa is a mixed private and public sector company. Its principal shareholders are the transport group Transdev (67.8%), the Paris transport operator RATP (20%), the Mulhouse Alsace Agglomération (10%) and the Colmar transport operator (1%).

Soléa carries more than 107,800 passengers per day, and serves a community of 245 367 inhabitants, in an area of 227 square kilometres (88 sq mi). It has 544 employees.[1]

Trams[]

The Mulhouse tram system commenced service in 2006, and was last extended in December 2010. It now comprises three purely tram lines, plus one hybrid tram-train line:[2]

  • Line 1 from Gare Central to
  • Line 2 from to
  • Line 3 from Gare Central to Lutterbach
  • Tram-train line from Gare Centrale to Thann via Lutterbach

The system is operated by 27 Alstom Citadis 302 trams, which operate routes 1 to 3, and 12 Siemens Avanto tram-trains, which operate the route to Thann. On the latter route, Soléa manages the route as far as Lutterbach and provides 25% of the drivers, whilst the remainder of the route and the remaining drivers are provided by the SNCF.[1][2]

Buses[]

Soléa operates 21 daytime bus routes, plus a shuttle service between Gare Central and Mulhouse hospital. It also operates 13 routes on evenings, Sundays and holidays, and 13 school bus routes. It does this with a fleet of 131 buses, of which 43 are articulated buses.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Soléa en chiffres 2010" [Soléa in figures 2010] (in French). Soléa. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Haydock, David (April 2011). "France's first real tram train". Today's Railways. Platform 5 Publishing Ltd. pp. 37–40.

External links[]

Coordinates: 47°45′46.5″N 7°20′11.8″E / 47.762917°N 7.336611°E / 47.762917; 7.336611



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