• Long-awaited, line B of the Rennes metro went into service on Tuesday morning.

  • 20 Minutes was on board the first train to collect the impressions of passengers.

  • For the start, access to line B will be free all week.

The start is sporty.

Accustomed to the tranquility of line A, which they have been frequenting for twenty years, people from Rennes discovered the restless line B on Tuesday morning. Vilaine) can go up to 80 km/h at peak speed.

Above all, it offers an acceleration at start-up which has surprised many travelers, not yet fully awake.

To collect their first impressions,

20 Minutes

got up early (but really early) and jumped on the first train.


🚨 Breaking News: It's now official, line B of the Rennes metro is in service #rennes pic.twitter.com/yeGi6csjWY

— Jerome Gicquel (@jgicquel) September 20, 2022

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Phone in hand to immortalize the event, Nina was also on the trip.

Living in the district of Cleunay, the young woman has long waited for this day.

"It's borderline moving," she says.

I very often take the bus to see my friends in the city center but it's often a hassle.

There, I will be able to move very quickly”.

Comfort on board trains and time savings

Like her, many onlookers, including many young people, cut their night short to take a short trip on line B. "I can tell my grandchildren that I was on board the first train", fed up Kevin.

A student at Rennes-2 University, the young man takes selfies, impressed by the comfort on board.

"It shakes a little compared to line A but the trains are still super classy," he says.

It's super pleasant, very spacious and bright.


A law school student, Anna also enjoys traveling.

But above all the time she will save each morning.

"I live next to the station and in ten minutes I can be in progress", underlines the young woman, who previously had to chain "metro, bus or walk".

Irène also got up early on Tuesday morning.

A habit for this mother who lives in the Gayeulles district and cleans offices in the city center.

"It's sometimes complicated to travel by bus when you have staggered schedules, you sometimes have to wait a long time if you miss one," she says.

With the metro, it will be punctual and there is less risk of arriving late”.

“A transformation of the urban landscape on the surface”

On retirement, Bernard no longer has this concern for punctuality.

Passionate about architecture, he discovered, not without joy, the face of the line's fifteen stations.

"It's still amazing because we managed to build a city under the city without having too much impact," he exclaims.

Present on board the first train, Nathalie Appéré also wanted to recall that the metro was not only an underground development, but also "a transformation of the urban landscape on the surface", especially around the stations.

“This metro is carbon-free and consumes little.

It's a technological feat but it's also a long-term political choice,” recalled the president of Rennes Métropole.

Eventually, the metro imagined by Siemens Mobility could pass every sixty seconds or so, reaching a top speed of 80 km/h and displaying an average of 35 km/h.

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Line B of the metro will "revolutionize" Rennes, promises the mayor

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Rennes: A strike announced on the bus network for the start of metro line B

A titanic project of 1.3 billion euros

Launched twenty years ago when line A had just been inaugurated, the idea of ​​building a second line will have had time to germinate in the minds of the people of Rennes.

After eight years of a titanic project that will have cost 1.3 billion euros, the 14 kilometers have finally been opened to travellers.

Now, three-quarters of Rennes residents live less than 600 meters from a station.

Line B has 15 and hopes to transport 110,000 people per day in the long term, to which must be added the 140,000 who travel daily on line A. The elected officials hope that this commissioning will remove "50,000 cars per day" in a metropolis which has almost 500,000 inhabitants.

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