Gare de Longueville, Railway station and historical monument in Longueville, France.
Longueville Station is an operational railway and heritage monument in the town of Longueville in Seine-et-Marne, featuring multiple tracks and platforms serving regional and long-distance services. The grounds contain a historic locomotive roundhouse from the early 1900s that now operates as a museum space.
The station opened in December 1858 as part of a major railway line connecting Paris and Mulhouse, establishing itself as an important hub in the regional network. The locomotive roundhouse added in 1911 represents early 20th-century railway engineering and received protected monument status in the 1980s.
The station grounds house a museum that displays railway history and attracts visitors interested in vintage trains and railway engineering. The location serves as a gathering point for those passionate about rail transport in the region.
The station can be reached by regional and long-distance trains that stop daily with connections to Paris and other cities across the region. Visitors should check museum opening hours ahead of time and allow time to explore the historic roundhouse complex on the grounds.
The roundhouse remained operational until 1967 and was long a central place for servicing and repairing steam locomotives in the region. Today visitors can see how these technical facilities worked and admire the preserved machinery displayed in the museum.
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