World-class waterways
The département draws its name from the Oise, a navigable river
which has been opened to barge shipments of up to 5.000 tonnes. The
Bruyéres-sur-Oise port is slated for promising future development,
while existing facilities at Cergy-Pontoise play a key role in
supplying local industries. Gennevilliers-sur-Seine, France’s
largest container port, is just minutes away, and an ambitious
program to enhance port facilities along the Seine and Oise is now
in progress.
Outstanding rail linksand TGV
station
A good 120 miles of track serve the département through 68 SNCF
stations, 18 of them serving two towns. The TGV (high speed train)
station is available in Val d’Oise at Roissy-CDG airport
(direct trains to and from Belgium, England, and the mains cities
in France), major train lines which fanned out from Paris in the
nineteenth century have been modernized and now carry both
international and commuter traffic to and from the Gare
Saint-Lazare and Gare du Nord, the largest train stations in Paris.
And the Val d’Oise is the only département in Greater Paris
region served by four lines of the RER express commuter rail
network : the A and B lines run to Cergy and Roissy CDG airport and
the D line to Survilliers, while the C line from Paris-Invalides
serves the full lenght of the Vallée de Montmorency as well as
urban areas around Argenteuil and Sannois. A rapid rail link
between Cergy and Roissy is also planned. Freight handling
facilities are found in five multi-functional stations, and a
number of industrial sites have direct rail links, among them
Fosses-Saint-Witz.
A close-knit highway
network
Altrough most of the Val d’Oise lies beyond the rim of heavy
traffic around Paris, highways and motorways make for quick access
to the capital. Efforts are currently focused on improving direct
road links within the region -the section of the Francilienne outer
ringroad between Roissy CDG airport and Cergy-Pontoise has been
completed from 2001, and work has begun on the BIP (Boulevard
Intercommunal du Parisis) linking the A15 and A1 motorways. Plans
also call for a number of new motorways (A104, junction A16 - "La
Francilienne"). In the decade ahead, these roads will be one of the
département’s greatest assets, bringing economic centers
closer together through a network built around the Cergy-Roissy-CDG
airport axis.
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