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Citadis

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A Citadis 202 tram in Melbourne, Australia
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A Citadis 202 tram in Melbourne, Australia

The Citadis is a low-floor tram built by Alstom in La Rochelle, France, currently in use around the world, in (among others), the Paris region, Lyon, Montpellier, Bordeaux, Orléans, Rotterdam, Dublin (see Luas), Melbourne (see Trams in Melbourne), and Katowice / Metropolian Katowice (see Silesian Interurbans).

A Citadis 302 Paris, France on a section of grassed track
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A Citadis 302 Paris, France on a section of grassed track

The Citadis family includes both partially low-floor and 100% low-floor trams, in versions with three, five, and seven sections. The 70% low-floor Regio-Citadis variant allows for tram-train operation, in which trams run also on mainline railway tracks; it is used in the German city Kassel, and has just been delivered for the Hague. This train type are having possibillities of duo-powering (diesel/600 VDC, 600 VDC/1,5 kV 16 Hz or 600 VDC/Bioenergy/-diesel). The Citadis family comprises:

Like most trams, Citadis vehicles are usually powered by overhead electric wires, but Bordeaux uses ground-level power supply, with which they are powered by a third rail even in the city centre, where the tracks are not always segregated from pedestrians and cars. Safety is ensured by placing the third rail between the other two, and dividing it into eight-metre sections, each of which is only powered while it is completely covered by a tram. There is therefore no risk of a person or animal coming into contact with a live rail. In outer areas, the trams switch to conventional overhead wires. See [this LRTA report] for more information.

Major competitors to the Citadis include Bombardier Transportation's Flexity family (Outlook, Swift, Classic, and the Link tram-train), and Siemens Combino and Avanto trams. There is also Crotram, new competitor from Croatia, that is still to make some major breakthrough, which is very likely hence its low floor tramways of TMK 2200 series are temporary regarded among the most sophisticated in the world, but still with considerably lower prices than all major producers in the EU.

Ordered Citadis

In France, the Citadis is close to a monopoly market because all new trams in France are low floored and almost all of them are Citadis trams from Alstom.

Australia

Spain

Ireland

Netherlands

Poland

Tunisia

See also

External links

 


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