Paris joins car-free movement
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As traffic delays and vehicle pollution continue to plague major cities around the globe, many cities are starting to take measures to limit car usage, if even just for a day.
Paris is the latest city to join the car-free movement, and will be closing areas of the city to cars between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. on September 27. Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo, along with nonprofit environmental group (Paris Without Cars), have been organizing the event since March when Ms. Hidalgo agreed to the idea.
The 1st through 7th districts as well as the 10th and 11th, the Champs 脡lys茅es, Place Stalingrad, Place de la Republique, the Left Bank, the Place de la Bastille, the Eiffel Tower, the Bois de Vincennes, and the Bois de Boulogne will be particular havens for pedestrians, reported .
The fine print, however, states that emergency vehicles, public transport, and taxis are still allowed even in the closed sections, reports , but speeds will be reduced to 20 mph.
Paris Sans Voiture offered on the event website, including discovering hidden nature while taking a new walking route, teaching your kid to ride a bike, or hosting a brunch with friends in an area usually clogged with traffic.
鈥淥ur city has to establish an exemplary signal responding to global issues,鈥 says. 鈥淏ut it also has to respond to local issues after record peaks of pollution and climate challenges that are more than ever at the heart of everyday life. The car-free day, by its magnitude, will also leave a lasting mark on the collective imagination: Everyone can project a city more livable, adopt sustainable behaviors, particularly in terms of mobility and the sharing of public spaces,鈥 reported .
The momentum for the event comes after 鈥渟mog in Paris almost reached 鈥榗ritical鈥 levels in March, briefly catapulting it ahead of New Delhi and Beijing for the title of city with the ,鈥 reports the . Paris is clearly putting forth an effort to lower pollution levels, also announcing a in July that offers financial assistance to those wanting to ditch their cars and also for condominium owners wanting to build safe bike storage or install electrical charging stations for bikes and vehicles.
Canadian cities such as Vancouver and Montreal, as well as Mexico City, Los Angeles, and Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam have all previously organized events closing streets and neighborhoods to traffic.
In early August, L.A. hosted the 14th edition of during which six miles of roads were closed to cars from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. replaced by more than 20,000 cyclists and pedestrians.
Bogota, Colombia even hosted a last year, but Belgium took the movement even more seriously this summer, closing streets to automobile traffic in Gent for ten weeks, and into neighborhood parks.