The RER is a regional network that covers the suburbs of Paris as well as the city, the mètro is mainly in Paris itself, though more and more métro lines are being extended beyond the city limits. (I live near the RER Ligne B - about an hour's train journey south of Paris)
You can't go on the metro, you have to go on the RER (google it). From the centre of Paris it takes about 35 minutes.
It's not the Métro (RATP), but the suburban railway (RER, Line A).See this link:http://parisbytrain.com/rer-train-paris-to-euro-disney/
RER Pont du Garigliano is nearest, then Metro Lourmel.
The address is in Maisons-Lafitte, which is outside the Metro area. It does, however, have an RER station: From Paris Gare de Lyon, take RER A, direction Poissy or Cergy, stop at Maisons-Laffitte
Alas, no. What makes it worse is that very few stations have them either. EDIT: the RER trains have toilets. The metro trains don't.
No, the Paris Metro does not extend as far as the Disneyland resort, but... - there is a shuttle bus from both Paris airports throughout the day to Disneyland, €16 for adults, €13 for children. The timetable and operating hours are available on the Disneyland Paris website. - alternatively, you could catch the RER train link to Paris, and then switch for the RER line A train direct to the resort (Marne-la-Vallée - Chessy). In Paris these RER lines run on the same way than the metro system, but faster with fewer stations.
it's the sound the RER makes on the Paris metro!
== == Disneyland Paris is served by the RER Marne La Vallee Chessy station. One needs to use the RER-Line A. The nearest RER station to the Louvre where one can board RER-Line A is the Châtelet - Les Halles (Paris RER station). The Louvre is about 1.5km (one mile) to the Châtelet - Les Halles (RER station). One can walk. If one wants to use the metro, then go to the Palais Royal/Louvre metro station; take either Line 1 or Line 7; go to/get off at the Chatelet metro station, and board the RER-Line A to Marne La Vallee Chessy.
Auber - Paris RER - was created in 1971.
Champigny - Paris RER - was created in 1859.
there are 16 subway lines in Paris, plus 5 RER urban train lines using part of the network and existing metro stops.
Take RER B and get out at Gare du Nord stationChange for RER E and get out at Gare Saint-LazarestationTake metro line 3, heading towards Pont de Levallois and get out at Wagram station