SAFEGE
- ️Thu Nov 19 2009
SAFEGE is an acronym for the French consortium Société Anonyme Française d' Etude de Gestion et d' Entreprises (en: French Limited Company for the Study of Management and Business.) and is pronounced SAY-fij in English.
The consortium, consisting of 25 companies, including the tire-maker Michelin and the Renault automotive company, produced an aerial railway technology. The design team was headed by Lucien Chadenson. Today the company is a subsidiary of Suez Environnement and specialises as a consultancy in water and environmental engineering.
Contents
Design concept
The design of the system entails suspending passenger cars beneath rubber-tired wheel carriages of the type used more conventionally in the Paris Metro. The carriages are enclosed and supported by a box-like track or beam, with an opening in the bottom. The rubber wheels of the train run inside the track, supported by flanges on the bottom of the beam.
Unlike previous suspended monorails like the Schwebebahn in Wuppertal, Germany, the tracks are not exposed to inclement weather, and do not need any cleaning or ice-removal systems. This advantage enables them to run in cities where ice and other conditions would impair the reliability of the system.
Market position
SAFEGE systems are the leading type of suspended railway currently in transit use, though this consists of very few systems. Its chief and more numerous competitor in modern monorail applications are variations of the German-designed ALWEG system, in which the vehicles run on top of, and straddle, a solid beam.
SAFEGE monorails in the world
- There are two SAFEGE-type suspended railways in Japan. One is the Chiba Urban Monorail in Chiba and the other is the Shonan Monorail which runs from Ōfuna Station in Kamakura to Shōnan-Enoshima Station in Fujisawa.
- The test track built in France by SAFEGE in 1959, is a 1.4 kilometre monorail line featured prominently in the 1966 movie adaptation of Fahrenheit 451, directed by François Truffaut.[1] Although the track was dismantled not long thereafter, the original car survived longer.[2][3]
- Two Siemens SIPEM lines exist in Germany.
References
- ^ Trenholm, Rich (2009-11-19). "The future is now: Sci-fi films in real locations". Cnet-uk. http://crave.cnet.co.uk/gadgets/0,39029552,49304078,00.htm. "Fahrenheit 451 (1966). SAFEGE test track, Châteneuf-sur-Loire, near Orléans, France The monorail scenes were filmed on a now-demolished 1.4 km test track built in 1959"
- ^ Lambert, Randy. "Saran, France - SAFEGE Monorail...". Archived version of personal site hosted on now-defunct Yahoo! GeoCities; a photo essay of the derelict SAFEGE monorail cars now in storage in France.. Archived from the original on 2009-10-20. http://web.archive.org/web/20091020095620/http://geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Orbit/1061/safege/safege.html. Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- ^ Zapato, Lyle (2004-12-11). "French Monorail Trash". Monorail Danger. http://zapatopi.net/blog/?post=200412114840.French_Monorail_Trash.
- Suspended - SAFEGE Technical Page - Safege. Retrieved May 25, 2008.
External links
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