SAFEGE

{{Short description|French company, subsidiary of Suez}}

SAFEGE is an acronym for the French consortium Société Anonyme Française d'Etude de Gestion et d'Entreprises ({{langx|en|French Limited Company for the Study of Management and Business}}) and is pronounced {{Ipac-en|'|s|ei|f|i:|Z}} in English.

Company

The consortium, consisting of 25 companies, including the tire-maker Michelin and the Renault automotive company, is a consulting and engineering bureau. It was formed in 1919 as Société Auxiliaire Française d'Électricité, Gaz et Eau, a holding company with interests in private water, gas, and electricity production and distribution. When in 1947, these public utilities were nationalised, the company became the engineering and consulting office which it is today, taking the name Société Anonyme Française d'Études, de Gestion et d'Entreprises.

Today it is a subsidiary of Suez SA and specialises as a consultancy in water and environmental engineering. Its main market is France, at 60% of turnover.{{Citation needed|date=June 2025}}

SAFEGE type monorail

{{see also|Suspension railway}}

File:Higashiyama-kouen Monorail.JPG

File:Higashiyama Park Monorail 20170617.jpg

File:ShonanMonorail-M8676.jpg

SAFEGE gained international recognition for its design of a suspended monorail in the 1960s. The design team was headed by Lucien Chadenson.

=Design concept=

{{Unreferenced section|date=July 2023}}

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.

=Test installation=

The test track built in France by SAFEGE in 1959, was a {{convert|1.4|km|adj=on}} monorail line that featured prominently in the 1966 movie adaptation of Fahrenheit 451, directed by François Truffaut. Although the track was dismantled not long thereafter, the original car survived longer.

=Market position=

{{Unreferenced section|date=July 2023}}

SAFEGE systems are the leading type of suspended railway in transit use, though this consists of just four installations of two different 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-type monorails in the world=

==Mitsubishi Heavy Industries==

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries of Japan has developed a working system of SAFEGE-type suspended railways, and have made three such installations, two of which remain in operation today.

  • From early 1964 to December 1974, :ja:名古屋市交通局協力会東山公園モノレール ran between Higashiyama Zoo and the nearby Botanical Gardens in Nagoya, Japan.{{cite book|last1=Voice|first1=David|date=2010|publisher=Adam Gordon|isbn=978-1-874422-81-5|page=37|edition=1|title=Monorails of the World: A History of Passenger Monorails}} While initially popular, it also suffered from mechanical problems and after the first two years of operation, the novelty wore off and it began making a loss.{{cite web|last1=Demery|first1=Leroy|title=Monorails in Japan: An Overview|url=http://www.publictransit.us/ptlibrary/specialreports/sr9.JapanMonorails.pdf|publisher=www.publictransit.us|access-date=3 January 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060621134953/http://www.publictransit.us/ptlibrary/specialreports/sr9.JapanMonorails.pdf|archive-date=21 June 2006}} Plans to expand the zoo and gardens hastened its demise, although the car and a section of track is preserved at one of the stations. While it was initially marketed as a ride, rather than a means of transport, a fare was charged, making it the first revenue-earning SAFEGE/Mitsubishi-type monorail.
  • In 1970 the Shonan Monorail opened. It runs from Ōfuna Station in Kamakura to Shōnan-Enoshima Station in Fujisawa.
  • In 1988, the first stage of the Chiba Urban Monorail system opened, in Chiba. With a {{convert|15.2|km|mi|adj=on}} route length, it is the longest suspended monorail in the world.

==[[Siemens]]==

  • Two Siemens SIPEM lines exist in Germany, one on the Dortmund University campus, the other at the Düsseldorf airport. Siemens no longer actively markets this system, but does still deliver the software for the automatic operation of a SIPEM network and vehicles.

==Unfulfilled proposals==

In 1966, a proposal was considered to construct a SAFEGE-type monorail in the City of Manchester. The {{convert|16|mi|km|adj=on}} line was planned to link Manchester Airport with the city and suburbs, with a tunnel under the city centre, but the scheme, along with the later Picc-Vic tunnel (which would be a conventional rapid transit line) was abandoned due to cost.{{cite journal|title=Monorail for Manchester?|website=archive.commercialmotor.com|date=28 January 1966|url=http://archive.commercialmotor.com/article/28th-january-1966/24/monorail-for-manchester|access-date=5 March 2017}} The city eventually developed its own light rail network, Manchester Metrolink,{{cite book|last1=Ogden|first1=Eric|last2=Senior|first2=John|title=Metrolink|publisher=Transport Publishing Company|location=Glossop, Derbyshire|year=1992|isbn=0-86317-155-9}}

of which one of its lines, opened in 2014, now links Manchester Airport to the city centre.

In November 1967, General Electric proposed to construct a SAFEGE monorail from downtown San Francisco to San Francisco International Airport.{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/rapidtransitserv1968jaco|title=Rapid transit service to San Francisco International Airport and to the Peninsula|last1=Jacobs|first1=Allan B.|last2=San Francisco (Calif.). Dept. of City Planning|last3=San Francisco (Calif.). City Planning Commission|date=1968|publisher=San Francisco : Dept. of City Planning|others=San Francisco Public Library}} The City of San Francisco studied the proposal, along with an extension of the Southern Pacific Railroad's Peninsula Commute commuter rail line and an extension of the BART rapid transit system. The proposal's incompatibility with other rail transit lines, the urban design concerns of an elevated guideway, and potential competitive impact on parallel rapid transit lines led to its dismissal in favor of a BART extension. Ultimately SFO was connected to downtown San Francisco via BART in 2003.

References

{{reflist|refs=

{{cite news|url=http://crave.cnet.co.uk/gadgets/0,39029552,49304078,00.htm|title=The future is now: Sci-fi films in real locations|work=Cnet-uk|date=2009-11-19|first=Rich|last=Trenholm|quote=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|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100211142534/http://crave.cnet.co.uk/gadgets/0,39029552,49304078,00.htm|archive-date=2010-02-11}}

{{Cite web|url=http://geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Orbit/1061/safege/safege.html |title=Saran, France{{dash}}SAFEGE Monorail... |first=Randy |last=Lambert |work=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. |access-date=2010-07-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091020095620/http://geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Orbit/1061/safege/safege.html |archive-date=October 20, 2009 |url-status=unfit }}

{{cite web

| url = http://zapatopi.net/blog/?post=200412114840.French_Monorail_Trash

| title = French Monorail Trash| date=2004-12-11

|first=Lyle| last=Zapato| work=Monorail Danger

}}

}}