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Paris residents vote to make 500 additional streets pedestrian

On Sunday, Parisians will vote on whether 500 additional streets in the French capital should be pedestrianised. The referendum is part of a new initiative by the left-leaning city hall in order to reduce car use and improve air pollution.

It is the third referendum of this kind in Paris within a few years. The first was in 2023, when a ban on electric scooters was approved. Last year, a decision to triple parking fees for large SUVs came into effect.

"For 25 years, we have gradually reclaimed public space to allow for pedestrian traffic and gentle traffic. We also created 'garden street', which creates lungs in our neighbourhoods.

Data from the Paris Town Hall shows that car traffic has been reduced by more than half since the Socialists took power at the turn-of-the century.

Since 2014, Mayor Anne-Hidalgo has led a significant transformation of the city's streets. The data shows that since 2020, 84 km of cycle lanes (52 miles), have been added and that bicycle usage has risen 71% from the end of COVID-19 to 2023.

The Sunday referendum, if approved, will remove 10,000 additional parking spaces in Paris. This is on top of the 10,000 that have been removed since 2020. Two million residents of the capital will be asked to vote on which streets become pedestrian zones.

PARIS BOTTOM OF LIST OF EUROPE'S GREENEST CAPITALS

According to the European Environment Agency, despite recent changes, Paris is behind other European capitals when it comes to green infrastructure. This includes private gardens, parks and tree-lined roads, as well as water and wetlands. Paris only makes up 26% of its city area, compared with the average for European capitals of 41%.

The critics of the new measures say that the measures taken by the townhall will make it more difficult for 10 million people who live in the outer suburbs where there is a less dense public transport network to commute to the city centre to shop and work.

It's important that people understand that Paris is not a museum. "Paris is still a place where people live, work, and have to travel. People from the greater Paris area are also forced to visit, as well as shops," said Philippe Noziere of the 40M automobile owners association.

The difference in car ownership between the suburbs and central Paris is striking: in the first, only one in three households has a vehicle. In the second, two in three have a vehicle. Car ownership in France, excluding Paris and its surrounding region, is at 85%.

If Parisians approve the proposal, these 500 streets will be planted, bringing the total to 700. This is just over a tenth of all the streets in the capital. (Reporting and writing by Michaela Cabrera, Clotaire Achi, Benoit van Overstraeten. Editing by Emelia S. Sithole-Matarise.)

(source: Reuters)