By Michaela Cabrera and Clotaire Achi
PARIS (Reuters) โ Parisians vote in a referendum on Sunday to decide whether an extra 500 of the cityโs streets should be pedestrianised and greened, in a new push by the French capitalโs left-leaning town hall to curb car usage and improve air quality.
This is the third such referendum in Paris in as many years, following a 2023 vote that approved a ban on e-scooters, and a decision last year to triple parking charges for large SUVs.
โFor the past 25 years weโve gradually been reclaiming public space for pedestrian traffic, for gentle traffic, and with โgarden streetsโ, to create lungs within neighbourhoods, the places where we live,โ Deputy Mayor Patrick Bloche told Reuters ahead of Sundayโs vote.
Paris town hall data shows car traffic in the city has more than halved since the Socialists assumed power at the turn of the century.
Mayor Anne-Hidalgo, in office since 2014, has overseen significant transformation in the cityโs streets. Since 2020, 84 km (52 miles) of cycle lanes have been created and bicycle usage jumped 71% between the end of the COVID-19 lockdowns and 2023, the data shows.
If approved, Sundayโs referendum will eliminate 10,000 extra parking spots in Paris, adding to the 10,000 removed since 2020. The capitalโs two million residents will be consulted on which streets will become pedestrian areas.
PARIS BOTTOM OF LIST OF EUROPEโS GREENEST CAPITALS
Despite recent changes, Paris lags other European capitals in terms of green infrastructure โ which include private gardens, parks, tree-lined streets, water and wetlands โ making up only 26% of the city area versus a European capitals average of 41%, according to the European Environment Agency.
Critics of the changes say the town hallโs measures make it increasingly challenging for the 10 million people living in the outer suburbs, where the public transport network is less dense, to commute to work and shop in the city centre.
โItโs important to know that the city of Paris isnโt a museum. Itโs still a city where people work, where workers are forced to get around, where people from the greater Paris region are forced to come, where there are stores,โ said Philippe Noziere, head of the automobile ownersโ association 40M.
Car ownership illustrates the divide between central Paris and the suburbs: only one out of three households own a car in the former versus two out of three in the latter. Excluding Paris and its region, car ownership in France is 85%.
If Parisians vote in favour of the proposal, the 500 streets to be vegetated will bring the total of these โgreen lungsโ to nearly 700, just over one-tenth of the capitalโs streets.
(Reporting by Michaela Cabrera and Clotaire Achi; Writing by Benoit Van Overstraeten; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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