- Opéra (Paris Métro)
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Opéra Date opened 19 October 1904 Accesses Pl. de l'Opéra (two)
6, rue Scribe
43, av. de l'OpéraMunicipality/
Arrondissementthe 2nd arrondissement of Paris Fare zone 1 Next stations Paris Métro Line 3 Direction
Pont de Levallois – BéconDirection
GallieniHavre – Caumartin Quatre-Septembre Paris Métro Line 7 Direction
Villejuif or
Mairie d'IvryDirection
La Courneuve – 8 Mai 1945Pyramides Chaussée d'Antin – La Fayette Paris Métro Line 8 Direction
BalardDirection
Créteil – PréfectureMadeleine Richelieu – Drouot Connections to other stations Saint-Augustin (9)
Saint-Lazare (3, 12, 13, 14)
Haussmann – Saint-Lazare (RER E)
Havre – Caumartin (3, 9)
Auber (RER A)List of stations of the Paris Métro Opéra is a station of the Paris Métro, named after the nearby Opera Garnier, built by the architect Charles Garnier. It is located at the end of the Avenue de l'Opera, one of the accesses being opposite the Opera, and serves the district of the Boulevard Haussmann. Three Métro lines (3, 7 and 8) cross each other at one point, known as a "well".
The station offers a connection to Auber RER station and indirectly with the Havre-Caumartin Métro station, however, ongoing construction work has limited the access Metro users have to it.
The station is famous for its strong odors of sewers. When it was being built, there were concerns that one of Hector Guimard's characteristic iron metro entrances would spoil the view of the opera house, so a marble entrance was built instead.
History
The line 3 platforms opened on 19 October 1904 as part of the first section of the line opened between Père Lachaise and Villiers. A twenty metre high masonry well was built to avoid the need for heavy underpinning work when lines 7 and 8 were planned to be built. This work was affected by groundwater, which required the support of three concrete pillars, made by sinking caissons with workers digging out the mud with compressed air. The work lasted eleven months, from March 1903 to February 1904.[1] The line 7 platforms opened on 5 November 1910 as part of the first section of the line opened between Opéra and Porte de la Villette. The line 8 platforms opened on 13 July 1913 as part of the first section of the line opened between Opéra and Beaugrenelle (now Charles Michels station on line 10).
Gallery
References
- ^ Robert, Jean (1983) (in French). Notre métro ("Our metro"). p. 54.
Paris Métro Line 3 Pont de Levallois — Bécon • Anatole France • Louise Michel • Porte de Champerret • Pereire ⇒ • Wagram • Malesherbes • Villiers • Europe • Saint-Lazare • Havre — Caumartin • Opéra • Quatre-Septembre • Bourse • Sentier • Réaumur — Sébastopol • Arts et Métiers • Temple • République • Parmentier • Rue Saint-Maur • Père Lachaise • Gambetta • Porte de Bagnolet • Gallieni
Paris Métro Line 7 La Courneuve — 8 Mai 1945 • Fort d'Aubervilliers • Aubervilliers — Pantin — Quatre Chemins • Porte de la Villette • Corentin Cariou • Crimée • Riquet • Stalingrad • Louis Blanc • Château-Landon • Gare de l'Est • Poissonnière • Cadet • Le Peletier • Chaussée d'Antin — La Fayette • Opéra • Pyramides • Palais Royal — Musée du Louvre • Pont Neuf • Châtelet • Pont Marie • Sully — Morland • Jussieu • Place Monge • Censier Daubenton • Les Gobelins • Place d'Italie • Tolbiac • Maison Blanche
South branch
Le Kremlin-Bicêtre • Villejuif — Léo Lagrange • Villejuif — Paul Vaillant-Couturier • Villejuif — Louis AragonSoutheast branch
Porte d'Italie • Porte de Choisy • Porte d'Ivry • Pierre et Marie Curie • Mairie d'IvryParis Métro Line 8 Balard • Lourmel • Boucicaut • Félix Faure • Commerce • La Motte-Picquet — Grenelle • École Militaire • La Tour-Maubourg • Invalides • Concorde • Madeleine • Opéra • Richelieu — Drouot • Grands Boulevards • Bonne Nouvelle • Strasbourg — Saint-Denis • République • Filles du Calvaire • Saint-Sébastien — Froissart • Chemin Vert • Bastille • Ledru-Rollin • Faidherbe — Chaligny • Reuilly — Diderot • Montgallet • Daumesnil • Michel Bizot • Porte Dorée • Porte de Charenton • Liberté • Charenton — Écoles • École Vétérinaire de Maisons-Alfort • Maisons-Alfort — Stade • Maisons-Alfort — Les Juilliottes • Créteil — L'Échat • Créteil — Université • Créteil — Préfecture
Coordinates: 48°52′14″N 2°19′56″E / 48.870636°N 2.3323526°ECategories:- Paris Métro line 3
- Paris Métro line 7
- Paris Métro line 8
- Paris Métro stations in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris
- Paris Métro stations in the 9th arrondissement of Paris
- Railway stations opened in 1904
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