Jump to content

North–South Axis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Brussels Premetro
North-South Axis
42555
Brussels-North
(Gare du Nord/Noordstation)
4
Rogier 26
De Brouckère 15
Bourse/Beurs
Anneessens-Fontainas
5182
Lemonnier
81
Brussels-South
(Gare du Midi/Zuidstation)
Eurostar 26
8182
Porte de Hal/Hallepoort 26
Parvis de Saint-Gilles/
Sint-Gillis Voorplein
Horta 8197
Albert
5134

The North–South Axis is a tram tunnel in Brussels, Belgium, which crosses the city centre from north to south between Brussels-North railway station and Albert premetro station.

The first section of this tunnel was opened on 4 October 1976 between Brussels-North and Lemonnier premetro station.[1] It was then expanded to Albert in 1993.[2] It is currently used by tram routes 4, 10, 51 and 82. Only routes 4 and 10 use the full tunnel. Route 51 uses it between Lemonnier and Albert and route 82 between Lemonnier and Brussels-South railway station.

Circuit and stations

To the north, the North–South Axis starts in the municipality of Schaerbeek near the crossroad between the Rue du Progrès/Vooruitgangstraat and the Rue Rogier/Rogierstraat. The first station in the tunnel is Brussels-North, which offers a connection with the railway station of the same name. The tunnel then crosses the municipality of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode up to Rogier where it connects with the Brussels Metro. It then enters the City of Brussels, and stops at De Brouckère (with again a connection with the metro), Bourse - Grand-Place/Beurs - Grote Markt, Anneessens-Fontainas and Lemonnier. At Lemonnier, a tunnel entry allows trams to enter or leave the tunnel at this point. The tunnel then crosses Saint-Gilles, stopping at Brussels-South railway station (where it connects with the train and the metro), at Porte de Hal/Hallepoort (where it connects with the metro), at Parvis de Saint-Gilles/Sint-Gillis Voorplein, and at Horta. At Brussels-South, another entry allows trams to leave or enter the tunnel. The last stop is Albert, and is located at the border between the municipalities of Saint-Gilles and Forest. Two different tunnel entries are then located on the Avenue Albert/Albertlaan on the Greater Ring (Brussels' second ring road) and on the Avenue Jupiter/Jupiterlaan.

Metro line 3

The North–South Axis will become an actual metro line, Metro line 3. In phase 1, the existing tram tunnel will be transformed into a metro line.[3] Lemonnier will not be served by the metro. Instead, there will be a new metro station, "Toots Thielemans", between Brussels-South station and Anneessens.[4] The metro line should be operational by 2025.

In phase 2 of the project, metro line 3 will be extended from Brussels-North station to Bordet railway station. Seven new stations and a depot will be built for this purpose. Construction should be completed by 2030.[3]

Map of future Metro line 3. The grey part has to be constructed. Station "Constitution/Grondwet" will be named "Toots Thielemans" in more recent plans.

See also

References

  1. ^ "STIB - Historique de la STIB de 1970 à 1979". Archived from the original on 2013-10-21. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
  2. ^ "STIB - Historique de la STIB de 1990 à 1999". Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2010-04-16.
  3. ^ a b "Works on metro line 3 and the Toots Thielemans station". www.brussels.be. 2020-03-09. Retrieved 2021-10-21.
  4. ^ "Construction of €175 million Brussels Metro Line 3 commenced". Urban Transport News. Retrieved 2021-10-21.