
| How to go from the AIRPORT to GARE de BERCY in one easy lesson. From Charles de Gaulle Airport From Orly Airport From Beauvais Airport Ordering Airport Train Tickets, from Charles de Gaulle or Orly (this takes you to a different page) Introduction Welcome to Paris. You have just de-planed, and you are still cursing the Wright brothers. Now you have to make your way to the train station. But first, you must figure out at which airport you have landed.
Your train to Paris will leave from the far platform (any train on either side of the far platform will go to Paris). Now skip down to Step 2.
From Terminal 3. Signs in your terminal will point you to RER / TGV or Gare RER / TGV. Don’t panic if the “RER “ and the “TGV” are inverted: they are still pointing to the same thing. This is the rail station. Paris par Train also works, as does Roissypole. A bit of a walk will bring you to the train station. All the trains from the airport stations go the same place. If you do not already have a ticket, buy one in the ticket office, a level up from the trains. Keep this ticket safe, since you will need it several times during the journey. Take the first train - they run about every 10 minutes. Locals make about 10 stops on the way into town; expresses run non-stop. Despite this, the first train to depart is the first to arrive: the “expresses” just run slowly, following the locals on their same tracks. But they are less crowded, which is nice if you have baggage. After about a 30-minute ride, your train goes underground and stops at a station called Gare du Nord, where it will idle for a minute or two. Start paying attention here. Stay on board, and ride one more stop, getting off at Châtelet - Les Halles. Step 3. You have detrained at the Châtelet - Les Halles station. Go up, via any of the stairs or escalators that you see on the platform (they all lead to the same place). At the top, follow “Correspondance” (connection) signs for line 14. Use your same ticket to get thru the turnstyles that these lead you to, and follow the windy corridor to line 14, direction “Bibliothèque François Mitterand”. Take any train that comes on this platform for two stops, to the Bercy station. Exit the métro by the only exit. When you come to daylight, you are a block away from the actual railway station (gare). A small sign points you in the right direction, along the railway viaduct. Find your train on the departure monitor (its track will typically be posted about 20 minutes prior to departure). If you are travelling on a railpass (as opposed to a point-to-point ticket), do not forget to go the ticket window to have it validated. If you have a point-to-point ticket, you must date-stamp it (composter, in French) in one of the little yellow machines at the track gates. It is NOT VALID until you do! ORLY AIRPORT Orly airport is in a state of flux. While all inter-continental airlines are currently in the south terminal, there is discussion of moving some to the west one (those are Orly's only two terminals). The following information assumes that you arrive at the south terminal, or Aerogare Sud. If you arrive instead at the west terminal, follow signs to reach OrlyVal (“Paris by Métro”), take the automated people-mover to Antony (the first stop), and start reading these instructions in the 2nd paragraph of step 2, below. Step 1. When you exit the baggage pick-up area and pass through customs at Orly Sud, you will find yourself inside the terminal building, facing the street. Outside the terminal, above the roadway on a viaduct, is a green-and-white train. This is what you want to ride. The little ticket hall is inside the terminal building, a bit to the left in the corridor that you are standing in once you clear customs. If you do not already have a ticket, use one of the multi-lingual machines to buy one to Paris. You will need euros to do so. Step 2. Go up the escalator which leads to the platform, and get on the first train. They all go to the same place in the end: the Antony railway station. This is where you want to go. It is the 2nd stop, after Orly-Ouest, and the total ride takes about 10 minutes. Do not be alarmed when the train reverses direction at Orly-Ouest - it is still doing what you want it to. When you reach Antony, get off. Go through the turnstyles, along the short moving sidewalk, and up the escalator to your left. This brings you to the platform for Paris. Walk towards the left when you reach the platform if there is no train waiting, since you will need to be at the far front end of the approaching train when you get off. Take the first train that comes. They all go where you need them to. Depending on whether or not you are on an express, this trip will take between 20 and 30 minutes. When the train goes underground, which it does as it enters the Denfert-Rochereau station, start paying attention. You now have 4 more stops: Port-Royal, Luxembourg, St-Michel, and Châtelet-Les Halles. Step 3. When you reach the Châtelet / Les Halles station, you are at the start of Step 3 of the Charles de Gaulle instructions, above. Take the stairs or escalator up. BEAUVAIS AIRPORT Beauvais Airport is not really a Paris airport at all. As it's name implies, it is in the town of Beauvais, 90 minutes north of Paris. A shuttle bus operates from the Beauvais airport to the Porte Maillot, a large traffic circle on the eastern edge of the city, meeting most flights. From Porte Maillot, métro line 1 runs to Nation. Connect there for line 6. Take this to the Bercy station. |
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