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-   -   Would you use Taxi or Shuttle from CDG to Paris during rush hour? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/would-you-use-taxi-or-shuttle-from-cdg-to-paris-during-rush-hour-665160/)

Anna1013 Dec 20th, 2006 07:38 PM

lemidi,

Just checked the site - are you taking about the VIP service instead of the shuttle service? The VIP service mentioned that they meet you on arrival(no need to call them) and the price seems good.

kerouac Dec 20th, 2006 09:19 PM

In terms of the RER question, it is an absolutely straight shot with no transfers. And if you can get one of the 'non-stop to Paris' trains, the RER will only stop 3 times after the airport -- Gare du Nord, Châtelet, and Saint Michel. In that case, the trip won't even take 30 minutes.

As pleasant as a private shuttle may be, I would say you are engaging in a trip of at least 90 minutes if you try to go by road.

Anna1013 Dec 20th, 2006 09:40 PM

kerouac,

You mentioned that we should look into the "non-stop to paris" routes - do they come by often, or just a couple times in the hour?

Also, the RER station we would get off at is St. Michel Norte Dame? Is it a metro station as well as an RER station?

I saw discussions of escalators/elevators - would we have a difficult time at both CDG and St. Michel with our luggage? Lots of stairs and longs walks?

kerouac Dec 20th, 2006 11:00 PM

I was checking the RER timetable and learned something I didn't know. The non-stop trains are at certain times of the day only. For example, there are non-stops at 15:25, 15:40 & 15:55 and then there are no more non-stops until 19:13, 19:28, 19:43, 19:58, 20:13, 20:28, etc.

For the time period of interest to you, the trains do make a few stops in the suburbs -- probably mostly for the benefit of airport employees who are finishing their shifts.

Here are some schedules for trains leaving CDG 2 with the arrival time at Saint Michel-Notre Dame:
16:48>17:28
16:55>17:34
17:03>17:43
17:10>17:46
17:18>17:58
17:25>18:01
You can count on a train about every 10 minutes or less.
Escalators and elevators at the airport, of course. At Saint Michel-Notre Dame, you would take the exit at the end of the train, which is a succession of 3 long escalators, followed by the last short one that takes you right up to the sidewalk in front of Notre Dame. Your problems wouldn't start until there, if your luggage is unwieldy, because it's true that you might not find a taxi for such a short distance. If your suitcases all have wheels, you will survive with no problem -- just walk along the left hand side of Notre Dame and keep going.

superheterodyne Dec 20th, 2006 11:10 PM

<i>For the time period of interest to you, the trains do make a few stops in the suburbs -- probably mostly for the benefit of airport employees who are finishing their shifts.</i>

Not really, although that is also a factor. You will note that at peak hours there are no more uptown direct trains either.

At peak-hours, there may be up to 6 trains per 15 minutes on the northern trunk of the RER B (from Gare du Nord to Aulnay). Shoving non-stopping trains in this pattern is

superheterodyne Dec 20th, 2006 11:15 PM

<i>For the time period of interest to you, the trains do make a few stops in the suburbs -- probably mostly for the benefit of airport employees who are finishing their shifts.</i>

Not really, although that is also a factor. You will note that at peak hours there are no more uptown direct trains either.

At peak-hours, there may be up to 6 trains per 15 minutes on the northern trunk of the RER B (from Gare du Nord to Aulnay). Shoving non-stopping trains in this pattern is quite difficult, so they are dropped.

Besides, at peak hours, a 20% drop in capacity is hard to cope with.

Even at &quot;normal&quot; times, the path of direct trains is drawn in the least conflictuous way : 60 km/h all the way, two blocks behind a stopping train.

When Roissy-Rail was launched in 1976 with shuttles to/from Gare du Nord, the journey time between GdN (ground station) and CDG was ... 17 minutes !

The increase in service brought by the RER B has led to much more &quot;relaxed&quot; train paths.

superheterodyne Dec 20th, 2006 11:38 PM

19 minutes in 1979. I was being too optimistic.

JeanneB Dec 21st, 2006 12:21 AM

Anna: By &quot;carryon&quot;, do you mean a small overnight type bag? Or is it another suitcase (19&quot;)? If two suitcases, I would take a shuttle.

I ride the RER with a smallish 24&quot; wheeled suitcase and a little overnight (carryon) bag. The small bag has a band at the back which slips over the extended handle of the suitcase. At the airport, I put a luggage strap around both to keep the top bag from sliding around. Voila!...a stable, manageable bundle.

When you go to the ticket office, write down your destination and the number of tickets you wish to purchase. Just give it to the clerk. From there it's a short escalator down to the platform. Keep your ticket until you exit the system in Paris---you may need it to get out.

We board at the front of the train. When we get off in Paris, there's one short flight of stairs which bring us out at Blvd St Germain (the opposite end to what you want). I've never done this, but it's my understanding you should board at the back of the train in order to alight at the &quot;Notre Dame&quot; end of the arrival station. Others here can confirm or clarify that. Perhaps they can tell you exactly which &quot;sortie&quot; sign to look for: &quot;Notre Dame&quot;? &quot;Ile de la Cite&quot;? We roll our bags about 8 blocks to our hotel.

It is now my preferred mode. Nothing beats coming up out of the station to find Paris all around you!

lemidi Dec 21st, 2006 05:50 AM

Hi Anna
The service we used was the VIP service. The driver was waiting for us outside baggage claim with a sign with our name (misspelled though so I am glad I was able to guess he was there for us).
To book: We emailed them a request for a reservation, they e-mailed back a request for a credit card number only for a guarantee. We had to pay cash on arrival. This is why I had the driver stop at a debit machine in the city rather than worry about a debit machine in the airport. I never change money before I leave home.
Worked out great and very cheap for what we got. I would use them again.

Regarding the RER into Paris: If you do not take the nonstop train (I wish I knew there were nonstops this past summer) the train may make a stop at every town and suburb along the way (some of which you may have heard of on the news in the past year). When I took it there were about 7 stops before gare du Nord. And, sorry Kerouac but this is not only for the benefit of airport employess going home but also for the benefit of picking up passengers going into the city. And I mean many passengers and all kinds of passengers...So this could take longer than a taxi or shuttle and will not be as comfortable.

Regarding luggage and escalators the airport does have elevators going down to the RER so no problem but getting out of the metro just be aware that those escalators are steep so no one should try with luggage if they have any walking problems or blanace/health issues.

Robespierre Dec 21st, 2006 06:03 AM

The trains that make intermediate stops don't take significantly longer to get to Gare du Nord than the nonstops. The 8h48 that makes 7 stops arrives at 9h23, and the nonstop 8h55 arrives at 9h26.

Look up the schedules (<i>horaires</i>) at ratp.fr if you want to know the actual times of any trip. The idea that the RER can take longer than a taxi or shuttle is pure horsefeathers.

kerouac Dec 21st, 2006 06:13 AM

lemidi, obviously the RER picks up passengers going into Paris at the other stops, but I was referring to the majority of passengers at that particular time of day -- between 4:30 and 6 p.m.

lemidi Dec 21st, 2006 06:21 AM

Kerouac, respectfully, I was only mentioning the pick up/drop off bit because I did see many more passengers getting on than off and it became very congested. If it is NOT nonstop it is less of an airport shuttle train than a local transport system for the entire city it seemed and can be a bit disconcerting for one recently arriving off a flight. Not good/not bad just a fact. There is a reason Anna mentioned that they do not want to take the RER originally.

Robespierre Dec 21st, 2006 06:38 AM

The reason Anna mentioned was &quot;One person in our party is really against the RER, but I don't think she(nor I) knew that we could get off at the RER station on Ile de Cite.&quot;

One glance at an RER map would have cured their ignorance.

Anna1013 Dec 21st, 2006 10:01 AM

lemidi,

You mentioned that if it isn't a non-stop train to Paris, we would hit some stops in the suburbs, and actually go through some of the stops that we talked about during the riots.

I know this is probably false, but I was nervous about going through those areas also.

fishee Dec 21st, 2006 10:54 AM

I was excited when I was on the RER and saw the names of suburbs that have only recently come to the attention of most Americans since the riots -- I had no idea of the lay-out until I was on the train and saw Courneuve and Saint Denis, (sp?) on the map. It was interesting to get a glimpse/reference of Paris that isn't just part of our packaged tourist cliches. If you're afraid or intimidated by the presence of any Black youth, then maybe stay off public transportation. I'm not trying to be snide or inflammatory -- just be honest with yourself about what makes you uncomfortable.

BTW, taking the Eurostar from London into Paris is so much easier and plesant than dealing with either of those horrid airports. Something to consider if people want to check out London a couple days before moving on.

lemidi Dec 21st, 2006 11:50 AM

Wow, there is a huge difference between black youth and rioting youth. I am sure most black you would resent any implication that where there are black youth there are riots.

lemidi Dec 21st, 2006 12:05 PM

Although fishee, I know you did not mean it that way, the statement that wasn't supposed to be inflammatory inflammed me so here I am again. It was not the color of the people that were getting on and off the RER, most of whom were caucasian as a matter of fact, but the behaviour of some of the characters. When I was on the line I did not even realize we were passing through &quot;those&quot; suburbs. It was not until I returned home and found people on this site repeatedly questioning the safety of the RER line B into Paris that I realized where we passed.
I admit I was a little nervous at night on that line but make no mistake it was not because of black youth. I know you understand the feeling fishee, like your last night in Paris when the man was following you. As the waiters said he was not a criminal.

fishee Dec 21st, 2006 12:11 PM

Yes, but so many people don't make any distinctions at all and are just afraid or intimidated by all Black kids.

Non-white urban kids are constructed as criminals.

fishee Dec 21st, 2006 12:18 PM

sorry lemidi, we're posting at the same time... I totally missed the anecdote you're referring to so I wasn't making any comment in relation to specific posts about this.

I was just responding to the OP who seemed to be articulating some general discomfort about going through particular suburbs. I may have missed some context here.

Christina Dec 21st, 2006 12:21 PM

I think you are confusing a lot of issues, lemidi. She wasn't referring to that particular route or the suburbs about black youth, but public transportation, in general. In fact, those suburbs have a different demographic in the majority.

Regarding the stalker, waiters cannot know whether someone is or is not dangerous or criminal, and having been at the receiving end of a couple (one in Paris, one elsewhere), guys who act that way often are dangerous and disturbed, because they have no sense of what is correct behavior and they don't care what the person wants and the person they are pursuing is often not a real person to them. It isn't cute nor funny nor harmless, those kind of guys can be mentally deranged and can harm people. A waiter has no omniscient knowledge of that. I am rather less polite about these things than fishee was, as I get rid of them but I have called the police to remove one (luckily, the police just happened to be nearby for other reasons, but it worked). I don't engage in conversation with them as much as fishee did, though, as it doesn't matter what you say, talking to them at all is encouraging because you are interacting with them. Professionals tell you this, also, you don't converse with them.


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