Our Twin Town - Aubergenville, France
Geographical Location
The town of Aubergenville is situated where two valleys meet: the valley of the Mauldre and the valley of the Seine 45 Kms from Paris on the A13 motorway, Aubergenville is situated 9 Kms from Mantes and 16 Kms from Poissy the two most important towns on this stretch of the Seine. Aubergenville is within a very important regional network of communications :
- The Al3 motorway, the RD113
- The mainline railway Paris / Le Havre left bank
- Near the TGV at Mantes on the Lyon / Rouen line
- Near the RER at Poissy
- Being sited at a crossing point of roads and railways it commands an important position on the banks of the Seine.
Click here for a link to show where in France Aubergenville is.
The Town Logo
![[image] Aubergenville Logo](include/images/aubergenville_logo.gif)
The town logo was created in 1990 - the same time as the Renault CLIO was launched!
The blue line represents the Seine and its dynamism
The green circular line expresses the will to maintain the greenery in the city and to create other parks.
The red circular line represents the will to make a true city in the countryside.
The small dot represent the desire to create and develop a thriving economic community.
Town Characteristics
The town covers an area of 883 hectares, extends 6 Kms from North to South and about 2 Kms East to West.
There are 4 areas of relief:
- The alluvial plain from the Seine to the RD113
- The hillsides rising gently at first towards the Maudre Valley
- The plateau of Montgarde
- The small valley of the Vaux les Huguenots

Population (last census 1999)
Total number of inhabitants - 11,667
Active population 5,921 ~ Comprising 3,115 male & 2806 female
The banks of the Seine and the Garene farm
The
river banks are about one metre above the Seine, On top there is a lane
(inaccessible to the public) which runs alongside the river bordered
almost all along by willows and poplars. Three buildings are
discernible, the swimming pool hotel, the swimming pool and the 'Paris
beach' now abandoned but which tell of leisure activities long past
linked to the presence of the water and the Garenne Farm (the only part
of the Garennes chateau that remains visible).
The Renault Factories
Part
of the Garenne lands (110 hectares) has been occupied since 1950 by the
Renault Factories which use the river as a means of transport.
The Garden City of Elisabethville
The
reason for its creation was the proximity of the railway station which
was built in 1899. The residential housing development of
Elisabethville extends across about 100 hectares. This development is
the district of the town with the most character. The church of St.
Theresa, built in 1927 and whose facade was sculpted from fresh
concrete, is a local landmark. It is listed in the supplement of
historical monuments.
The area near the Station
This
district is bordered by the railway and the Avenue Charles de Gaulle.
Since 1900 the town has undertaken a restructuring of this district:
housing and a regional car park for 324 vehicles.
The old Sand Pits
In
Aubergenville there are two old sand pits 2 Kms from the Seine. The
larger one stretches over the site of the Chevries to the East of the
Avenue Charles de Gaulle, the second is to the NW between the railway
and the outskirts of Epone.
The Chevries Zone has become a zone of industrial activity bordering on Clos-Reine.
Clos-Reine
Between
the Avenue Charles de Gaulle, the motorway and Epone, it is bordered on
the NW by the old sand pits. It is an area of enormous warehouses,
craft industries, a professional training centre and with housing near
the Avenue Charles de Gaulle.
The Market Gardens
This area occupies about 60 hectares of irrigated agricultural land. It is worked by ten market gardeners.
The Hillsides
The
old town grew up on the side of the hill. It has been extended to the
West by the new residential area of La Croix Gatee (349 houses) and
various town buildings (theatre/ function hall, clinic, retirement
home), The wooded hillsides of the Montgarde Plateau and the Vivier
Park make a framework of greenery crossed by footpaths that link the
different quarters of the town and the plateau.
Beyond this crown
of woodland stretches the eastern slope of the Mauldre Valley. The old
village, the historical heart of the town, comprises buildings which
line the streets and which give way to gardens. One can see farm
buildings and rural activities in the enclosures.
Over the years there have developed from the old centre several small
residential areas consisting of flats and individual private houses.
The woodland on the edge of the southern end of the plateau (plateau de
Montgarde) gave way during the 60s to the expansion of the town. The
operation 'Land and Families' was built in the wooded park of the old
Chateau d' Acosta. This development of 1,849 flats, built of brick and
half hidden by the trees, has brought about the construction of schools
and sports facilities on the Plateau.
The Plateau
Beyond
the plain and the wooded hillsides there extends a vast agricultural
plateau. The Montgarde Plateau forms the northern limit of the plain of
Versailles which stretches parallel to the valley of the Seine on a NW
/SE axis.
If you would like to know in more detail about becoming a member of the
Horndean Parish Twinning Association then please contact us
by sending an email to:Mick Lovell (Treasurer) or Doug Middleton (Chairman)


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