The decoration is in the Andreu-Motte style with two bright green light canopies, benches covered with flat green tiling and white Motte seats, which thus break the colorimetric uniformity of the decorative style. It has two platforms separated by the metro tracks and the vault is elliptical. Quatre-Septembre is a standard configuration station. ← toward Pont de Levallois – Bécon ( Opéra) Side platform, doors will open on the right Made up of a fixed staircase, it is adorned with a Guimard iron edicule, which is the subject of a decree as a historic monument on. The station has a single access entitled Rue du Quatre-Septembre, opening at the right of the number 20 of the same street, at the corner of Rue Choiseul and Monsigny. Until then, trains crossed it without stopping there. The station opened on 3 November 1904, three weeks after the first section of line 3 went into service between Avenue de Villiers (today Villiers) and Père Lachaise. In 2019, 1,997,741 travelers entered this station which places it at the 246th position of the metro stations for its traffic out of 302. Quatre-Septembre is humorously renamed Premier Avril. On 1 April 2016, half of the nameplates on the station's platforms were replaced by the RATP to make an April Fool joke for a day, as in twelve other stations. As part of the RATP's Metro Renewal program, the station's corridors were renovated on. Like a third of the stations in the network between 19, the platforms were modernized in the Andreu-Motte style, green in color with flat white tiles in this case. Situated on the Rue du 4 Septembre, the station commemorates the date of 4 September 1870, when Léon Gambetta proclaimed the beginning of the French Third Republic from the palace of the Tuileries, after the capture of French emperor Napoleon III by German armies during the Franco-Prussian War. Until then, trains passed it without stopping there. The station opened on 3 November 1904, three weeks after the first section of line 3 went into service. The line opened in October 1904, when the first section of Line 3 began service between the Avenue de Villiers (today the station is known as simply Villiers) and Père Lachaise. Oriented approximately along an east–west axis, it is located between the Opéra and Bourse stations. The station is located under Rue du Quatre-Septembre, between Rue de Gramont and Rue de Choiseul. It is named for the date of 4 September 1870, the date Napoleon III fell and the Third French Republic was proclaimed. Quatre-Septembre ( French pronunciation: ) is a station on Paris Métro Line 3 located in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris.
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