I came across a map on my Facebook news feed the other day showing a comparison of the French Autoroute network from 1990 and 2019. I was intrigued to discover how different it looked back then, with the most notable omissions including:
Was there a political decision behind such a rapid expansion on this scale, or an engineering or economic one?
Shame the pace of building LGVs can’t keep up mind.
- Generally a very Paris-centric network, following roughly the same routes as the TGV network does today.
- Very few cross-country autoroutes bypassing Paris. The A26 (Calais-Reims) and A31 (Dijon-Luxembourg) are largely complete, but apart from that most autoroutes involve connecting Paris in some way.
- Some clusters of local autoroutes around provincial cities including Lille, Rouen, Lyon and Marseille, but relatively short in length.
- A notable lack of autoroutes through the Massif Central, with no A20, A75 or A89. To get from Bordeaux to Lyon on autoroutes you would have needed to go via Montpellier.
Was there a political decision behind such a rapid expansion on this scale, or an engineering or economic one?
Shame the pace of building LGVs can’t keep up mind.