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Speed limit on the Paris ring road to drop down to 50km/h

France's capital city plans to reduce the speed limit on the Paris ring road to 50km/h in autumn 2024.

Speed limit on the Paris ring road to drop down to 50km/h
Photo: Annie Spratt/Unsplash/Nicolas Raymond

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo announced on Wednesday, during a presentation of the capital’s 2024-2030 climate plan, that the city planned to lower the speed limit on the Paris ring road to 50km/h – dropping from the current 70km/h.

This change is expected to come into force in September 2024, following the Olympic Games. However, the City of Paris told Le Parisien that the exact date remains to be confirmed.

Local authorities explained that the goal in reducing speed limits by 20km is to “meet major environmental challenges of today and tomorrow”, according to French daily Le Parisien.

This is not the first time Paris has lowered the speed limit – in 2014, it was dropped from 80km/h to 70 km/h.

Dan Lert, the Green party deputy mayor in charge of ecological transition for the city of Paris, said during the press conference that “we are making progress on the transformation of the ring road by introducing carpool lanes, as well as the 50km speed limit”.

Lert also invoked the city’s objective to improve air quality, including efforts to reduce the number of cars on the roads. “Fewer cars means less pollution. In 10 years, we’ve seen a 30 percent reduction in fine particles and a 45 percent reduction in road-traffic-related nitrogen dioxide, which is good, but still too much,” he said.

The deputy also estimated that approximately 10,000 and 20,000 Parisians “are over-exposed to air pollution”. 

Paris’ ring road is already expected to undergo some changes in the months ahead. Prior to the Olympics, the city plans to create an ‘Olympic lane’ intended to be reserved for officials and athletes during the Games. It will later be turned into a carpool and public transport lane.

READ MORE: French cities to start enforcing lanes reserved for carpooling

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PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS

The Paris Metro and RER stations that will close during the Olympics

If you're in Paris over the summer you may need to adapt your travel plans, as some Metro and RER stations will close during the Games.

The Paris Metro and RER stations that will close during the Olympics

Paris Police Prefect Laurent Nuñez on Friday unveiled security measures for the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games – including public transport changes.

Opening ceremony

Most of the transport disruption is linked to the ambitious opening ceremony on July 26th – with closures starting in the days leading up to the ceremony and stations re-opening either after the ceremony ends on Friday night or on the following Saturday morning.

These closures affect the ‘protection perimeter’ or the enhanced security zone along the riverbanks that form the route of the opening ceremony.

“All Metro stations leading into the protection perimeter will be closed from July 18th”, Nuñez revealed in a press conference devoted to the police and military arrangements in place for the grand ceremony.

“If you set up a watertight perimeter, but allow people to take the Metro and go back up in the middle of this perimeter, it’s no longer watertight,” he added. 

READ ALSO How to check for Paris Olympics disruption in your area

With the exception of Saint-Michel on the RER C line, all Metro and RER stations within the anti-terrorist protection perimeter will be closed eight days before the event, during which time authorities will be clearing the river, until after the opening ceremony on the Seine.

The various closures will have no impact on the operation of the lines, which will continue to run, as the Paris Police Prefect emphasised, they just won’t stop at those particular stations.

The 15 stations that will be closed are:

  • Alma Marceau (line 9)
  • Champs-Élysées Clémenceau (lines 1 and 13)
  • Cité (4)
  • Concorde (1, 8, 12)
  • Iéna (9)
  • Javel (10)
  • Passy (6)
  • Quai de la Râpée (5)
  • Trocadéro (6, 9)
  • Tuileries (1)
  • Champs-Élysées Clémenceau (RER C)
  • Musée d’Orsay (RER C)
  • Pont de l’Alma (RER C)
  • Trains on Line 7 will pass under the Seine without passengers between Châtelet (including line 11), Pont Marie, Pont Neuf and Sully Morland stations.

Buses are also affected.

“On the day of the ceremony, no buses will be allowed to circulate within the perimeter,” the Préfecture de Police said.

Buses will still run, but vehicles will be rerouted to avoid the area.

Rest of the Games period

Once the ceremony is over, most services will return to normal.

However some stations will remain closed for the duration of the Games – mainly those that are located within or next to competition venues.

Concorde station will be closed to users of line 1 and 8 from June 17th to September 21st and line 12 from May 17th to September 21st, due to its proximity to the site dedicated to urban sports. 

READ ALSO Factcheck: Which areas will be closed in Paris during the Olympics?

Tuileries, served by line 1, will be closed from June 17th to September 21st.

Finally, on lines 1 and 13, Champs-Élysées-Clémenceau will be closed from July 1st to September 21st.

Tramway stations will also be affected by the closures.

Starting with Porte d’Issy (T2) and Porte de Versailles (T2, T3a) tram stations will be closed from July 25th to August 11th and from August 29th to September 7th.

The Colette Besson station on the T3b line will also be closed from July 27th to August 10th, and again from August 29th to September 8th.

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