SHARE
COPY LINK

CITIES

Which French city is the best to escape to if you quit Paris?

Montpellier has been ranked as the city stressed-out Parisians would most like to escape to to live, but other surveys, including The Local's own, suggest they would be better off moving elsewhere.

Which French city is the best to escape to if you quit Paris?
Photo: Wolfgang Staudt / Wikimedia

In 2016  80 percent of high-earning Parisians  were dreaming of leaving the stresses of the capital for alternative cities, according to job site Cadre Emploi.

A new study by the blog Paris Je te Quitte (Paris, I’m leaving you) published on Wednesday names Montpellier as the most desirable place for Parisians wanting to escape the capital.

The southern city close to the Mediterranean gained the highest combined score from seven criteria, these being climate, quality of life, environment, geographical location, culture and leisure, security and employment.

Photo: Empoor/ Wikimedia

Just 8km to the beach, plenty of sunshine hours and an average rent of 595 euros, Montpellier shapes up well.

But is it really the best alternative to the Paris rat race?

Previous studies tout other cities as the ideal change from Paris

A city on the rise

A survey in September 2016 showed that among top-earning Parisians, 56 percent of them would choose Bordeaux as their ideal spot to start a new life should they leave Paris.

Bordeaux is on the up for employment and city life following years of investment. “Huge investments have turned Bordeaux into a vibrant, cosmopolitan city, which – in comparison to other major French cities like Paris, offers remarkably good value for money,” Helen Robinson, one of the directors at local real estate agency Bordeaux and Beyond, told The Local.

Improved links to Paris make the city an even more attractive proposition for resettling Parisians, as of July 2017 you will be able to get from Bordeaux to the capital in two hours by high speed train.

(The new museum of wine in Bordeaux. AFP)

So only a short trip away if you start to miss Paris life, you could even commute there and back if you were really committed.

However, all of this interest has a downside; property prices are soaring. Bordeaux has the fastest-growing prices of any major city in France.

“With property prices shooting up, there is a fear that the average man on the street will be priced out of the city,” British writer Scott Gilmour, who has made Bordeaux his home for 10 years, told The Local.

A small town vibe

(Nicolas Vollmer. Flickr)

Some recent studies suggest the best alternatives to Paris lie out west, in Brittany.

A comprehensive survey by L'Express magazine this week ranked Nantes as the best place to work in France, due to the city scoring well in categories such as jobs, low unemployment, transport connections and ease for young people entering the jobs market.

But what if you are a foreigner looking to flee all those Parisians?

Does that change anything when it comes to choosing an alternative city? It certainly does according to our own study.

If you’re a foreigner living in Paris and looking for somewhere new to start, then we say Rennes (see photo above) in Brittany offers the best choice for you.

In our own study on the best cities for foreigners in France, the western city came out on top of all 13 cities included (including the capital).

While it may not be able to boast the booming investments of Bordeaux, Rennes is a city for those seeking the quieter life outside of Paris and to improve their all round quality of life.

“A city with a small town vibe” is how Georgia Wyche, an American English teacher who has been living in Rennes for two years, describes it. “The size of Rennes is quite comfortable and not intimidating,” she told The Local.

(Maltman23.flickr)

You’ll certainly be able to a be a little looser with your budget in Rennes, it was only beaten by Clermont-Ferrand for low rent prices and had the lowest unemployment rate of the cities studied by The Local at 8 percent.

And you can spend the cash you save in one of Renne’s many bars, one for every 1,670 inhabitants.

“You know Montmartre (in Paris) with its little streets and the village feel? There are parts of Rennes that are quite similar to that, with lots of bars and cafes,” said Stewart Bennett, who runs O'Connell's pub and has lived in Rennes for 15 years. “But of course it’s not nearly as expensive as Paris.”

The categories where Rennes fell down was in its places of culture and number of Michelin-starred restaurants, art and fine-dining lovers might be at a loss after living in Paris.

But it's not just us ranking Rennes top of the table. An EU study in 2016 put Rennes top of the table of all French cities for quality of life with 95 percent of inhabitants saying they were happy with life there.

But in the end it's up to you? Or would you just rather stay in Paris?

by Rose Trigg

 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

CITIES

5 things you should know about Chemnitz, the newly crowned capital of culture

The Saxonian city of Chemnitz was named European capital of culture for 2025 on Wednesday, meaning it beat off competition from Hanover, Nuremberg, Hildesheim and Magdeburg. Here are some fascinating facts about the city.

5 things you should know about Chemnitz, the newly crowned capital of culture
The Chemnitz town hall. Photo: DPA

City mayor Barbara Ludwig was clearly delighted by the surprise result, saying that “this will do the city so much good. What an amazing feeling.”

Chemnitz probably isn’t on many people’s radars. Here are five things that have marked the city's rocky history.

1. The Saxonian Manchester

The golden days for the city of Chemnitz came in the 19th century when it was one of the first German cities to embrace the revolutionary technology of steam power.

It won the moniker “Saxonian Manchester.” This nickname wasn’t just a reference to the manifold factory chimneys, it was also a comment on the poor air quality in its streets. Just like in the English town, textiles were a central pillar of the local economy.

The city was a hub of invention – six times more patents were registered than the German average. And as industry took off, so too did the population. Chemnitz achieved the status of a Großstadt in 1883 when its population topped 100,000.

2. It is the original home of Audi

The luxury car maker is normally associated with the city of Ingolstadt. But it was actually founded in Chemnitz in the 1930s when four major car companies of the time were united under one brand – Auto-Union (hence the four rings joined together.)

After the war, when the communist rulers in East Germany started seizing the wealth of private companies, the engineers at Auto-Union fled to Bavaria, bringing their know how with them. It was one of several such stories that still have an effect on employment in the city today.

3. A famous name change

The city cente in 1910 (right and 1977 (left). Photos: Wikipedia Commons 

Chemnitz was an important centre of military production during the war, with Auto-Union’s Siegmar factory being used to produce engines for the Wehmacht’s tanks. The allies flattened the city centre in the last few months of the conflict, leaving much of its historical architecture completely destroyed.

In 1953, the communist leadership of the GDR renamed the city Karl Marx Stadt, saying that the city deserved the honour due to its history of active political engagement among its proletariat. There is still a huge granite bust of the 19th century economist in the city centre.

The city that was rebuilt would have been barely recognisable to someone who grew up in Chemnitz in the late 19th century. The opulent Gründerzeit architecture was replaced by endless rows of Plattenbau.

The name was changed back to Chemnitz almost immediately after reunification when three quarters of the population voted in favour of the original name.

Photo: DPA

4. At the foot of the Erzgebirge

The history of Chemnitz isn't just rocky in the metaphorical sense, it has quite literally been influenced by the rock of the Ore mountains.

When we think of German cities with a mountain view the mind obviously springs to Munich. But Chemnitz is one of the few other Großstädte that sits at the foot of a mountain range.

From the city one can travel up into the Ore Mountains, which are largely untouched by tourism.

The thick forests and steep valleys make for some impressive views. As the name suggests the mountains are a rich vein of ore and contributed to the transformation of mining in the early modern era.

5. A neo-Nazi march

In recent history, Chemnitz is best know for a neo-Nazi march which took place there in 2018 after a local man was stabbed to death by a refugee.

There was local unrest over several days and neo-Nazis descended on the city where they also attacked migrants and gave the Hitler salute.

A mass concert in the aftermath with people coming from across the country to stand against right-wing extremism.

READ MORE: Chemnitz: Portrait of a city shaken by anti-foreigner riots

SHOW COMMENTS