Canals of Paris: Canal Saint-Martin

The Canals of Paris: Canal Saint-Martin is a commercial waterway and is part of the Canals of Paris.
It runs for 4.50 kilometres through 9 locks from Seine - Saint-Martin Jonction (where it joins the Lower Seine (non-tidal section: Amfreville to Paris) and the River Seine - Upper Seine ) to Bassin de la Villette (where it joins the Canals of Paris: Canal Saint-Denis and the Canals of Paris: Canal de l'Ourcq (Grande Section)).
The exact dimensions of the largest boat that can travel on the waterway are not known. The maximum headroom is not known. The maximum draught is not known.
Notable features of the waterway include Bastille Tunelle
Seine - Saint-Martin Jonction Junction of River Seine with the Canal Saint-Martin |
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Ecluse de l'Arsenal (9th lock) | 0.10 kilometres | 0 locks | |
Port de Plaisance de Paris-Arsenal Moorings in the centre of Paris |
0.35 kilometres | 1 lock | |
Bastille Tunelle (portail sud) | 0.57 kilometres | 1 lock | |
Bastille Tunelle (portail nord) | 2 kilometres | 1 lock | |
Ecluses du Temple (7th and 8th locks) This is a 2-lock staircase |
2.03 kilometres | 1 lock | |
Ecluses des Recollets (5th and 6th locks) This is a 2-lock staircase |
2.43 kilometres | 3 locks | |
Ecluses des Morts (3rd and 4th locks) "Locks of the Dead", this is a 2-lock staircase |
2.84 kilometres | 5 locks | |
Ecluses de la Villette (1st and 2nd locks) This is a 2-lock staircase |
3.37 kilometres | 7 locks | |
Bassin de la Villette Junction of Canal Saint-Martin, Canal Saint-Denis and Canal de l'Ourcq |
4.50 kilometres | 9 locks |
- VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
- The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
- Ports de Plaisance de Paris — associated with Port de Plaisance de Paris-Arsenal
- Marina website
There is no page on Wikipedia called “Canals of Paris: Canal Saint-Martin”
Wikipedia pages that might relate to Canals of Paris: Canal Saint-Martin
[Canal Saint-Martin]
The Canal Saint-Martin is a 4.6 km (2.86 mi) long canal in Paris, connecting the Canal de l'Ourcq to the river Seine. Over nearly half its length (2069
[Canal de l'Ourcq]
la Villette, and the Canal Saint-Martin. The canals were created as part of the administrative management of water in Paris during the nineteenth century
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View of the Canal Saint-Martin is an 1870 painting by Alfred Sisley, first exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1870. It was acquired by Gaudoin or Pierre-Firmin
[Canal Saint-Denis]
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[Canal du Midi]
reign of Louis XIV. The Canal du Midi is one of the oldest canals of Europe still in operation (the prototype being the Briare Canal). The challenges in these
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components of the network are the Canal de l'Ourcq, the Canal Saint-Denis, the Canal Saint-Martin, and the Bassin de l'Arsenal. Together, these canals and basins
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