Véhicule Automatique Léger
Véhicule Automatique Léger or VAL is a type of driverless, rubber-tyred, light metro. The technology was developed at the Lille University of Science and Technology, was marketed by Matra, and first used in the early 1980s for the Lille Metro system, one of the world's first fully automated mass-transit rail networks, preceded only by the Port Island Line in Kobe, Japan. The VAL technology is now marketed by Siemens, which acquired Matra in the late 1990s.
A total of 11 lines in 8 systems based on the VAL technology are currently in operation worldwide. The current version of the VAL product is marketed as NeoVal.
The name is a backronym, with the first project to use the technology nicknamed VAL after the routing of the line: Villeneuve d'Ascq à Lille.
Technology
Original VAL
The VAL system uses a fully automated elevated guideway, which may be metal or concrete depending on prevailing weather conditions. Primary suspension is by rubber tires, with pairs of horizontal tires to provide lateral guidance. Electrical power at 750 V DC is collected by shoes from the guidebars.The vehicles are lightweight 2-car sets with 124 total capacity, or twin sets with 80 seated and 160 standing capacity. All axles on these vehicles are motored with electrical motors. The system detects the location of trains on the guideway by the use of ultrasonic sensors. VAL uses fixed-block signalling.
VAL can cope with unanticipated demand by inserting additional trains into the network as required by remote command from the control center. The control center computer system automatically speeds up or slows down trains in order to maintain a timetable. The VAL system can handle headways as small as 60 seconds, and the Lille VAL system rapidly proved itself with a 99.8% availability.
In contrast to another early driverless metro system, the Vancouver SkyTrain, the VAL design uses platforms that are separated from the rollways by a glass partition, to prevent waiting passengers from straying or falling onto the rollways. Platform screen doors – produced by Swiss glass door manufacturer Kaba Gilgen AG – are embedded in these partitions and open in synchrony with the train doors when a train stops at the platform. The original platform-edge doors were manufactured and installed by PLC Peters in Hayes, Middlesex and were used on the first line.
In addition to the trains being driverless, the station platforms are unstaffed in normal operation. In the original Lille metro system, they are monitored by a large closed-circuit television system with 330 cameras and 24 television monitors in a remote control room.
NeoVal
In 2006 the NeoVal project, successor of the VAL, was announced. It features regenerative braking. 40% of the 62 million Euros set aside for the programme will come from the Agence de l'innovation industrielle. The program is managed by Siemens Mobility, in association with Lohr Industrie. The NeoVal will be guided by a single central rail, similar to that of the Translohr, and will be able to operate without any electrical supply between the stations, making the cost of infrastructure much lower.The NeoVal is offered in two versions:
- the CityVal version designed for conventional transit environments with the first implementation on Line B of the Rennes Metro;
- the AirVal version designed for airport environments with the first implementation on the Suvarnabhumi Airport Automated People Mover at Suvarnabhumi Airport, Thailand.
VAL systems
Active systems
there are a total of 12 lines in 8 systems operating with VAL technology:- Lille Metro, since 1983, VAL 206 and VAL 208 cars
- Paris Orlyval, since 1991, VAL 206 cars
- Toulouse Metro, since 1993, VAL 206 and VAL 208 cars
- Taipei Metro Wenhu (Brown) line, since 1996, larger VAL 256 cars using the MAGGALY technology from Lyon Metro Line D and Bombardier signaling
- Rennes Metro, since 2002, VAL 208 and CityVal cars
- Turin Metro, since 2006, VAL 208 cars
- Paris CDGVAL, since 2007, VAL 208 cars
- Uijeongbu U Line, since 2012, VAL 208 cars with air conditioning, locally designated the U100
- Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport, since 2023 - 6 2-car AirVal trains
Future systems
- Frankfurt Airport SkyLine - 24 2-car AirVal trains
Defunct systems
- Airport Transit System at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport
- Jacksonville, Florida, had a VAL line inaugurated in 1989; it was shut down in December 1996 and replaced by a monorail, the Jacksonville Skyway. The rolling stock was sold to O'Hare.