Airports Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur has two of the busiest airports in France:
Nice Côte d'Azur Airport (ranking third nationally after
Charles de Gaulle Airport and
Orly Airport) and
Marseille Provence Airport (ranking fifth nationally after
Lyon–Saint-Exupéry Airport). Nice saw 14,485,423 people travelling through its airport in 2019, while 10,151,743 used Marseille to fly. As of 2019, the third-busiest airport in Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur is
Toulon–Hyères Airport (507,199 passengers), ranking 27th nationally.
Motorways The region is at the centre of a complex and dense motorway network, in the heart of Mediterranean coast. Motorways are operated by ASF, ESCOTA, SMTC, MPM (Marseille Metropolis) and DIR Med (State). In PACA, motorways have the particularity to serve the city centres of large cities, unlike other large cities of France. This is due to their comparatively early construction in relation to the motorways of France's other regions. •
A7 – Autoroute du Soleil "Motorway of the Sun" links the region to Lyon and on to the North of France. This motorway starts in central
Marseille at the
Porte d'Aix. The road widens at Septèmes Valleys and meets the A51. After a junction with the A55 and connecting highways A517, A551 and A552, the motorway crosses Vitrolles in 2x2x2 lanes. It serves
Marseille Provence Airport and
Aix-en-Provence TGV railway station. After 10 kilometres, the A7 passes the
Berre-l'Étang petrochimical complex at a junction with the D8 highway. After this it meets the A8 Provençal motorway at
La Fare-les-Oliviers. After the toll station at
Lançon-de-Provence, the road meets the A54 motorway at
Salon-de-Provence. The motorway continues along the Rhône and Durance to Avignon and Orange until Lyon. •
A8 – La Provençale, crosses the region from west to east to Italy. This motorway starts from the A7 at La Fare-les-Oliviers. The first part of free-road starts and cross Aix-en-Provence to be linked with A51 and N296 motorways. After the Palette Valley, the motorway arrives to the La Barque tool and the junction with the A52 to Aubagne, Marseille-Est and Toulon. Crossing the Var department with the A8/A57 junction at
Le Luc, the A8 gets a mountain profile to cross the French Riviera: Cannes, Antibes, Nice. A connection is made with A500 motorway at La Turbie to serves the Principauty of Monaco. After Menton, the motorway cross the Italian border until Genoa. •
A50 – This motorway connects the east of Marseilles after the Prado-Carénage tooltunnel to Toulon. After crossing the Huveaune Valley and the South of Aubagne, the motorway goes near the coast to Toulon city center. The motorway crosses the city with a tunnel until A57. It is a suburban motorway. •
A51 – Autoroute du Val de Durance "Motorway of the Durance Valley". The motorway starts with the A7/A51/A517 junction in the north of Marseille between Plan-de-Campagne and Septèmes Valleys. 20 kilometres after, the motorway stops at the A8/A516/A51/N296 junction in the southern part of
Aix-en-Provence. At Aix-Nord, the motorway restarts and goes to rural South Alps after
Manosque. It ends near Tallard, at south from
Gap. •
A52 – Grand Contournement de Marseille "Marseille Bypass". The motorway starts at the A8/A52 junction in Aix-Est (La Barque). It is a mountain 2x2 motorway built at around Marseille. After the A52/A520 junction and Pont de l'Étoile, it ends at Aubagne, connected with A501 and A50. •
A54 – Autoroute de la Crau "Crau Motorway". This motorway starts at the A7/A54 junction at Salon-Est and the crossing of
Salon-de-Provence with four exits, the motorway arrives at the Crau Plain. It ends at the N569/A54 junction in Saint-Martin de Crau. It re-begins at Arles-Ouest to
Nîmes,
Montpellier and
Barcelona. •
A55 – Autoroute du Littoral "Coastal Motorway". This motorway starts at
Port-de-Bouc. After the Martigues bridge, the motorway passes at the south of the Berre pond in the Estaque Mountains After the A7/A55/A551/A552 junction at
Les Pennes-Mirabeau, it crosses the mountains and arrives at Marseille (Estaque district). After the junction of Grand Littoral, the way crosses the new
Euroméditerranée Central Business District with a long bridge of . Cars enter in the Joliette tunnel, continued by the Vieux-Port tunnel under the sea and the Prado-Carénage tooltunnel. These three tunnels crosses the Marseille city centre. A55 is connected with A50. •
A57 – Autoroute des Maures "Maures motorway". This motorways starts at A50/A57 junction after the Toulon tunnel. After the A57/1570 junction at
La Valette-du-Var, the motorway continues along the plain of Maures to Cuers and Le Luc to be link with the A8. •
A500 - Tunnel de Monaco "Monaco Tunnel". This motorway starts at La Turbie (A8) at the west of Monaco. The A8 goes over Monaco but A500 goes in Monaco with a tunnel to the principality. • A501 - Aubagne bypass, connects A50 to A52. • A502 - Garlaban motorway. This little motorway connects the A50 from Aubagne to Aubagne-Est to the Garlaban mountains. • A515 - Junction from A51 to Gardanne. • A516 - L'Aixoise. This motorway connects the A51 southern East Junction to Aix city centre. • A517 - Convergent de Septèmes-les-Vallons "Convergent of Septemes Valleys". Link between A7 and 51. • A520 - Autoroute de la Sainte Baume "Ste. Baume motorway". This motorway starts from A52 at Pont de l'Étoile and ends at Auriol East to be connected with N560 to the Sambuc pass and Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume. • A570 - Autoroute de la Côte "Motorway of the Coast". Link between A57 and
Hyères. The national road N97 continues after to
Saint-Tropez. • N113 - Highway in Vitrolles along the A7. Highway of the Crau Plain between Saint-Martin-de-Crau (A54) to Arles-Ouest (A54). • N296 - Aix-en-Provence bypass. • N569 - Port of Fos-Marseille. • D6 - Highway of Arc Valley from A515 to Rousset-Peynier Technologies centre. • D8 - Petrochimical area of Berre. • D9 - Link between Marseille Provence Airport, Aix TGV high speed train station, the Arbois desert, Europolis and Aix-en-Provence.
Trains High speed services on the
LGV Méditerranée The region is served by 13 high-speed trains stations and one more in the
Principality of Monaco. Two stations are situated on the
LGV Méditerranée opened in 2001: Avignon TGV and Aix-en-Provence TGV. The others stations served by high-speed services are Avignon-Centre, Arles, Miramas, Marseille-Saint-Charles, Toulon, Les Arcs-Draguignan, Saint-Raphaël-Valescure, Cannes, Antibes, Nice-Ville and Menton. • Services operated • Paris GDL to
Avignon-Centre /
Miramas • Paris GDL to Marseille, Toulon, Nice,
Monaco and
Ventimiglia (Italy) •
Nantes /
Rennes to Marseille •
Strasbourg to Marseille •
Lille to Marseille •
Nancy /
Metz /
Dijon to Marseille / Nice •
Le Havre to Marseille • Services operated by SNCF Ouigo: •
Marne-la-Vallée – Chessy to Marseille •
Lyon-Perrache to Marseille • Services operated by SNCB/NMBS TGV: •
Bruxelles Midi/Brussel Zuid (Belgium) to Marseille and Nice • Services operated by CFF Lyria: •
Geneva (Switzerland) to Marseille and Nice • Services operated by DB Alleo: •
Frankfurt am Main (Germany) to Marseille • Services operated by
Renfe AVE: •
Madrid-Atocha (Spain) to
Barcelona (Spain) to Marseille • Services operated by
Eurostar: •
London Saint Pancras Int. (UK) to
Ashford (UK) and Marseille • Services operated by
Thalys (seasonal): •
Amsterdam (Netherlands) to
Brussels (Belgium) and Marseille
National services Despite the importance of the region in the national economy and demography, the national services on conventional network are not very high due to the fact of the saturations of the tracks with high speed and regional trains. • Services operated by
SNCF Intercités: •
Bordeaux-Saint-Jean to
Toulouse,
Montpellier,
Marseille-Saint-Charles and Nice •
Paris-Austerlitz to
Marseille-Blancarde and Nice (night train) • Paris-Austerlitz to
Gap and
Briançon (night train) • Services operated by Thello Eurocity: •
Marseille-Saint-Charles to Nice, Monaco, Ventimiglia,
Genoa and
Milano Centrale (Italy)
Regional services train at
Sausset-les-Pins station All regional train services are operated under the ZOU! brand used for interurban train and bus services funded by the region. All such services are part of the
TER Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur network and operated by
SNCF on behalf of the region, except for services on the line between Nice and Digne-les-Bains, which are operated by
Chemins de fer de Provence, a company owned by the region. In 2021 the region became the first in mainland France to open up TER services to competition, and after a tender process awarded a contract to
Transdev to operate TER services on the Marseille-Nice line. Transdev is scheduled to commence operations in place of SNCF from June 2025. The Regional Council of Provence-Alpes Côte d'Azur is the transport authority and defines the services in all region. An attractive fare permits to transport more than 100,000 passengers every day in 750 trains. Trains are leaving every 15, 20, 30, 60 or 120 minutes on each line. The regional services operate on one set of tracks throughout the regions, which has led to delays and cancellations along the line. In 2016, during the second Council of the Year at the Region Hall in Marseille, in front of politicians and the new President of the Regional Council of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
Christian Estrosi, the SNCF CEO,
Guillaume Pepy, has announced the impossibility of the company to respond to the demand. The
Marseille-Saint-Charles Station, the Marseille's main railway station cannot support more than 23 trains an hour and the tracks are too old and not enough to accept an average of the capacity. The project of new high-speed line called
LGV PACA in 2030 could permit to increase trains on tracks with a new crossing of Marseille with a tunnel. Two new stations will be created in the territory of the city and a new line between Cannes and
Nice Côte d'Azur Airport. Services operated by CP: •
Nice CP to
Colomars and Plan du Var • Nice CP to Digne-les-Bains Services operated by SNCF are declined with two appellations unlike other regions : TER, normally suburban trains and Intervilles, long-distance regional trains. Services operated by SNCF Intervilles: • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Toulon, Nice and Monaco • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Gap and Briançon • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Avignon and Lyon-Part-Dieu • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Montpellier, Narbonne and Perpignan • Briançon to Gap, Valence TGV, Valence-Ville and Romans-sur-Isère • Avignon-Centre to Montpellier, Narbonne and Perpignan Services operated by SNCF TER: • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Marseille-Euroméditerranée, Port-de-Bouc and Miramas • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Vitrolles MP Airport, Miramas and Avignon-Centre • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Vitrolles MP Airport, Miramas, Nîmes and Montpellier-Saint-Roch • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Marseille-Euroméditerranée, Vitrolles MP Airport, Salon-de-Provence, Avignon-Centre and Avignon TGV • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Saint-Antoine, Aix-en-Provence and Pertuis • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Saint-Antoine, Aix-en-Provence and Sisteron • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Marseille-Blancarde and Aubagne • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Marseille-Blancarde, Aubagne, Toulon and Hyères • Marseille-Saint-Charles to Marseille-Blancarde, Aubagne, Toulon and Les Arcs-Draguignan • Avignon-Centre, Valence and Lyon-Perrache • Avignon-Centre to Nîmes, Montpellier, Narbonne and Perpignan • Avignon TGV to Avignon-Centre and Carpentras • Les Arcs-Draguignan to Cannes, Nice, Monaco and Menton • Grasse to Cannes, Nice, Monaco, Menton and Ventimiglia (Italy) • Nice-Ville to Breil-sur-Roya and Cuneo (Italy) • Briançon to Gap and Grenoble
Urban rail The
Métro de Marseille — opened in 1977 — is the region's sole subway system and consists of two lines, with a third planned. Marseilles also has a modern
tramway with three lines, as do
Aubagne and
Avignon with one line each and
Nice, with three lines. Each of those cities rebuilt their tram networks after they were shut down in the mid-20th century — the exception being Line 68 in Marseilles, which continued service until 2004 before being rebuilt and reopened as part of the current system in 2007. Tram networks operated in
Aix-en-Provence,
La Ciotat and
Toulon in the early- and mid-20th century also but have not been revived. ==Environment==