Location Image

Madeleine Caulier (métro de Lille)

La station Caulier est une station de la ligne 1 du métro de Lille, située à Lille. Inaugurée le 25 avril 1983, la station dessert la place Madeleine-Caulier dans le quartier de Fives. Son surnom est "Necklace city" en référence à sa traduction anglaise[réf. nécessaire].

1. Situation

La station est située en dessous de la place Madeleine-Caulier dans le quartier de Fives à Lille, mais n'est qu'à quelques mètres du quartier Saint-Maurice Pellevoisin. Elle se situe à côté de la ligne de chemin de fer qui relie Fives à Mouscron, en Belgique. Elle est située sur la ligne 1 entre les stations Fives et Gare Lille-Flandres à Lille.

1. Origine du nom

Elle tire son nom de la place Madeleine-Caulier qu'elle dessert directement et donc de Madeleine Caulier.

1. Histoire

Elle est inaugurée le jour du passage de François Mitterrand, le 25 avril 1983, sous le nom « Caulier ». Ses quais vont être allongés pour atteindre 52 m afin d'accueillir des rames de quatre voitures et ces travaux devraient s'achever en 2019-2020. À cette occasion une nouvelle entrée dans la station sera aménagée. Les travaux ont commencé en septembre 2013. La station est rebaptisée « Madeleine Caulier » en 2024.

1. Service aux voyageurs


1. = Accueil et accès =

Le sol est composé d'un dallage et les murs sont en briques, la station comporte un accès et deux ascenseurs en surface. C'est l'une des stations les plus profondes de la ligne.[réf. nécessaire]

niveau -1 : vente et compostage des tickets. niveau -2 : niveau intermédiaire permettant de choisir la direction de son trajet. niveau -3 : voie centrale et quais opposés.

1. = Desserte =


1. = Intermodalité =

Une station V'Lille est située à proximité de la station. En dehors des heures de fonctionnement du métro, la station est desservie par la ligne de nuit N1. La ligne 50 dessert la station par le biais de l'arrêt « Jacquet » situé à proximité.

1. À proximité

Située en dessous de la place Madeleine-Caulier, la station Madeleine Caulier permet de rejoindre le lycée Ozanam.

1. Annexes


1. = Articles connexes =

Métro de Lille Liste des stations du métro et du tramway de Lille

1. = Notes et références =

Portail du métro Portail de la métropole européenne de Lille

Nearby Places View Menu
420 m

Canton of Lille-3

The canton of Lille-3 is an administrative division of the Nord department, northern France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Lille. It consists of the following communes: Lille (partly) Mons-en-Barœul
Location Image
768 m

Zénith de Lille

The Zénith de Lille (originally Zénith Arena) is a multi-purpose indoor arena in Lille, France. Its ability to seat up to 7,000 people makes it one of the largest venues in Lille. The closest métro station is Lille Grand Palais. Designed by the Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas with Cecil Balmond and inaugurated in 1994, the Zénith Arena is a part of the cultural complex Lille Grand Palais which includes two other spaces: a congress center and exhibition halls. Rem Koolhaas surrounded himself with Renz van Luxemburg for the acoustic studies, dUCKS scéno for the scenography and Arup Group for the engineering studies.
Location Image
887 m

Euralille

Euralille is an urban quarter in the centre of Lille, France. Conceived as a major European business district in the late 1980s and early 1990s, it is strategically located at the intersection of the high-speed railway lines linking Paris, Brussels, and London, and incorporates the Gare de Lille Europe and Gare de Lille Flandres railway stations. The master plan was commissioned in 1988 to the Office of Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) led by Rem Koolhaas.
Location Image
903 m

Lille-Europe station

Lille–Europe station (French: Gare de Lille-Europe) is a SNCF railway station in Lille, France, on the LGV Nord high-speed railway. The station is primarily used for international Eurostar and long-distance SNCF TGV services, although some high-speed regional trains also call at the station. The station was built in 1993 to be used as a through station for trains between the UK, Belgium, and the Netherlands, as well as French TGV services, except those coming from Paris, which normally terminate at Lille-Flandres station. There is a 400-metre (1,300 ft) walking distance between the two stations, which are also connected by the Lille Metro and Lille tramway. Lille-Europe has 2 Island platforms serving 4 tracks, plus 2 gated through tracks for non-stopping trains in the middle of the station. The Main concourse is situated above the bypass.
987 m

ESC Lille

ESC Lille is a French business school founded in 1892. It has two campuses, one in Lille and one in Paris. ESC Lille is EQUIS accredited by the EFMD (European Foundation for Management Education) and the Conference Of The Grandes Ecoles. In 2005, it was the first European business school to be accredited by Project Management Institute’s Global Accreditation Center for Project Management (GACPM), and is still the only PMI-accredited business school in France. In July 2009 the union of Ceram Business School and ESC Lille was announced. It will create the largest French business school in terms of student numbers. The new school, named Skema Business School (School of Knowledge Economy and MAnagement), span three sites in France in Lille, Paris and Sophia Antipolis near Nice and three sites: in China (Suzhou) United States (Raleigh, NC) and Brazil (Belo Orizonte). In May 2019 SKEMA Business School announced the opening of a new site in Cape Town (South Africa) and the possibility to enter in Russia and India.