With a transparent dome made of plastic tubing, the circular building that welcomes travellers arriving in Bellegarde,
in the foothills of the French Alps, resembles a moon base rather than a railway station. Combining advanced technology
and bioclimatic architecture, the national rail operator SNCF's most recent creation reflects the publicly owned
company's determination to boost the environmental awareness of its buildings and make its stations an emblematic
feature of tomorrow's sustainable cities.
"Bellegarde is a prototype for what we plan to do with our biggest stations. Thermal and environmental performance
are at the top of our list of target specifications," says Sophie Boissard, who heads Stations and Connections,
the business unit set up by SNCF a year ago to operate and capitalise on its 3,000 stations.
Substantially larger than Bellegarde, the new TGV high-speed stations further north at Besançon and Belfort will
go even further along the same lines, deploying solar panels, Canadian wells, geothermal energy and a hi-tech
bioclimatic hothouse. Nor will this policy only affect new stations. The rail operator intends to enlarge and refurbish
at least 100 destinations over the next 10 years, investing some $6bn.
One priority is to improve conditions in buildings that tend to be freezing in winter and baking hot in summer.
But there is no question of turning them into air-conditioned coolers all year round. "It isn't financially possible
for us and it makes no sense in environmental terms," says Boissard.
Etienne Tricaud, the deputy-head of Arep, SNCF's design subsidiary, says: "What is at stake here is making travellers
comfortable without it costing the earth." This is where the bioclimatic systems experimented with at Bellegarde
will come into play. The dome is made of ethylene tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE), a tough, lightweight polymer derived
from Teflon, which is cost-effective and recyclable. It forms a hothouse above the wooden cupola that covers the
station. In winter, low-speed fans pump hot air from this cavity into the hall below, maintaining a temperature
of 16°C without consuming additional energy. In summer the hothouse produces a chimney effect, drawing off the
heat which is replaced by cool air at 10°C rising from a Provençal (or Canadian) well. "This system alone results
in 40% energy savings," says Tricaud.
Such "ecologically correct" comfort is all the more important because, according to SNCF's long-term strategy,
tomorrow's stations should become "a pivotal point in the sustainable town". On top of being hubs for all forms
of public and private transport (main and regional rail links, trams, buses, cars, bicycles), they are set to become
mini-town centres, combining offices, business centres and shops, healthcare, childminding and collection services.
"This is definitely the model I want to promote: it is a response to the need for greater density, multiple functions
and easy mobility," says Boissard, adding: "This approach makes sense, particularly for our 40 regional [mainline]
stations."
Another advantage of such diversification is that it is highly profitable, contributing to the modernisation of
railway infrastructure. Without the 10,000 square metres of retail space grafted on to the original project, it
would have been difficult to find the means to renovate Gare St Lazare in Paris, due for completion next year. In
many towns, the area round the railway station, long abandoned by all but sex shops and shady hotels, is now the
focus of a new urban and economic dynamic. "The decline of stations and surrounding neighbourhood was due to the
dominance of private cars. The drive to bring business back into town centres and the resulting upturn has reversed
this trend," says Boissard.
A similar pattern is apparent elsewhere. In Japan, where transit operators are also property developers, stations
are an essential component of town centres, uniting retail and business services. And in Switzerland the federal
rail operator SBB decides which businesses can be located near stations to achieve the right urban mix.